The U.K.’s Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation this week issued a new general license to allow certain transactions related to energy use in Mongolia. The license will allow certain payments to certain sanctioned banks -- including the Credit Bank of Moscow, Gazprombank, Sberbank and Rosbank -- or their subsidiaries “for the purpose of making energy available” in Mongolia. The license took effect Aug. 15 and will expire Aug. 14, 2023.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control published in the Federal Register a group of previously issued general licenses, including one set of licenses covering sanctions against Russia and two sets of licenses related to Venezuela. The full text of each license appears in the respective notice.
The EU needs to better diversify its trading partners and reform its anti-coercion instrument to protect itself from Chinese sanctions, Hinrich Foundation researchers said in a report this week. The EU also should establish a new multilateral economic security office to study and better respond to sanctions and trade restrictions imposed by third countries, the report said.
Australia plans to designate Russian gold an “import sanctioned good” under its autonomous sanctions regime, the country said Aug. 15. The designation will restrict imports and transportation of Russian gold by Australians, including gold in unwrought, semi-manufactured or powder forms. Australia said its period of public consultation on the sanctions will close Aug. 29.
The U.S. should better regulate the cryptocurrency industry to increase sanctions compliance, but not in a way that inhibits innovation, companies and trade groups told the Treasury Department in comments released this month. Some commenters said Treasury should issue more guidance to help firms better understand their compliance obligations and help digital assets from being used to evade global sanctions.
The U.K.’s Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation this week amended 27 entries on its Russia sanctions list. The entries, which include military officials, are still subject to asset freezes.
At least 450 kinds of foreign-made parts and components have been found in Russian military equipment captured in Ukraine since Moscow’s invasion earlier this year, the Royal United Services Institute said in a report this week. The majority of those components were manufactured in the U.S., the think tank said, and at least 80 “different kinds of components” are subject to U.S. export controls.
The U.S. obtained a warrant to seize an airplane owned by sanctioned Russian oligarch Andrei Skoch, DOJ said Aug. 8. The agency said the Airbus A319-100 aircraft was designated by the Office of Foreign Assets Control in June and is owned by Skoch through a series of shell companies and trusts tied to his “romantic partner.” The aircraft is worth more than $90 million, DOJ said.
New Zealand this month issued a new set of sanctions against Russia’s military and weapons manufacturers, including designations targeting various branches and independent arms of the country’s armed forces. The sanctions also target defense entities responsible for providing logistical support and weapons to Russia’s military as well as the Russian insurance company SOGAZ, Russian Railways and defense entities that research, produce and test military hardware.
The Bureau of Industry and Security this week charged a Chinese company with violating U.S. export controls when it helped Zhongxing Telecommunications Equipment Corporation sell controlled items to Iran. The company, Far East Cable, served as a “cutout” between ZTE and several Iranian telecommunications companies, BIS said, helping ZTE “conceal and obfuscate” its business dealings in Iran from U.S. investigators. In total, BIS said Far East Cable committed 18 violations of the Export Administration Regulations.