The U.K. issued a general license July 3 allowing certain transactions involving sanctioned parties and visa application service providers. Under the license, providers can receive and remit visa application fees, and British individuals and businesses can make visa application payments on behalf of sanctioned parties. Details of those transactions must be reported to the U.K.'s Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation within 28 days of making the payment.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control on July 3 updated a range of Russia-related entries on its Specially Designated Nationals List and Sectoral Sanctions Identifications List to specify that they present secondary sanctions risks. The agency added language to those entries to clarify that they present a secondary sanctions risk under “Section 11 of Executive Order 14024,” a 2021 order that authorizes certain sanctions against Russia. The agency didn’t provide more information.
The U.K. issued a general license July 1 authorizing sanctioned parties to make certain payments "owed or due" to "His Majesty's Revenue & Customs; the Welsh Revenue Authority; and Revenue Scotland." The license also allows individuals acting on behalf of sanctioned parties to make these payments. Payment details must be reported to the Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation within 10 working days of the payment being made. The license took effect July 1 and runs indefinitely.
The EU on June 29 expanded its sanctions on Belarus for its role in Russia's war in Ukraine to better align it with the restrictions imposed on Russia and address sanctions evasion issues, including by requiring companies to insert a “no-Belarus clause” in their contracts.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control this week sanctioned one person in Mexico and two in China for their ties to the Sinaloa Cartel, a Mexican drug trafficking group. The designations target Mexico-based Diego Acosta Ovalle, who helped the cartel hide and collect drug trafficking money, and China-based Tong Peiji and He Jiaxuan, members of a U.S.-based Chinese money laundering organization that has laundered illegal drug proceeds belonging to the Sinaloa Cartel.
Canada this week issued sanctions against people and entities for contributing to Israeli extremist violence against Palestinians in the West Bank. The designations target seven people and five entities, including Zvi’s Farm, Hilltop Youth and others previously sanctioned by the U.S. and the EU (see 2403140019 and 2404190018).
The Office of Foreign Assets Control plans to issue guidance on a law signed by President Joe Biden in April that extended the statute of limitations on certain sanctions violations from five to 10 years (see 2404290071 and 2404240043), Baker McKenzie said in a client alert this week. The law firm recently hosted a talk with OFAC official Lawrence Scheinert who said the agency is “working through the relevant legal issues” and plans to issue guidance about how the “change will be implemented,” Baker McKenzie said.
The U.S. this week sanctioned three United Arab Emirates-based entities and 11 of their vessels for their ties to Iranian petroleum and petrochemical trade, the State Department said. The designations came as Iran announced steps “to further expand its nuclear program in ways that have no credible peaceful purpose,” the agency said.
The Treasury Department’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network will soon issue a final rule designating Iraqi-based Al-Huda Bank a foreign financial institution of primary money laundering concern, which “severs” the bank from the U.S. financial system. The rule, which finalizes a proposed rule FinCEN issued in January (see 2401290025), prohibits U.S. banks from opening or maintaining a correspondent account for or on behalf of Al-Huda Bank, which FinCEN said is a "conduit" for terrorist financing. The rule takes effect 30 days after it's published in the Federal Register.
Japan recently announced sanctions and export restrictions on people and companies for aiding Russian war efforts against Ukraine, including parties in China, India, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan, according to an unofficial translation of a notice from Japan's Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry.