The United Kingdom’s Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation revised a range of entries under six different sanctions regimes, according to Jan. 21 notices. OFSI amended sanctions entries listed under the regimes for South Sudan, Libya, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, counterterrorism, and the Central African Republic; and it deleted 11 entries under its North Korean sanctions regime.
Serica Energy, a United Kingdom-based energy company, said it received a renewed license from the Office of Foreign Assets Control to continue providing goods, services and support to the North Sea Rhum field, the company said Jan. 21. Serica also said it received “secondary sanctions assurance” from OFAC and will be allowed to continue providing services to Rhum beyond the Feb. 28 expiration of its current license. The new license is valid through Jan. 31, 2023. The Rhum gas field is partly owned by an Iranian oil company. OFAC declined to comment.
A European Union Parliament resolution adopted Jan. 21 calls on the EU to sanction people and entities involved in the arrest and imprisonment of Alexei Navalny in Russia earlier this month. Although the EU sanctioned several Russian officials last year for poisoning Navalny (see 2010150008), a Russian opposition politician, the Parliament said those measures need to be expanded and “significantly” strengthened.
The United Kingdom’s Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation amended 15 sanctions entries under its regime for the Democratic Republic of the Congo and removed two entries from its regime for Iraq, according to Jan. 19 notices. The U.K. updated identifying information for the 15 entries listed under the DRC and removed entries for Zuhair Talib Abd-Al-Sattar Al-Naqib and Amir Rashid Muhammad Al-Ubaidi under Iraq.
The United Kingdom’s Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation amended entries under eight sanctions regimes, the U.K. said in Jan. 19 notices. OFSI amended entries under its regimes for Belarus, Burma, Chemical Weapons, North Korea, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Libya, Russia and Syria. The amendments update identifying information for the entries, which are still subject to asset freezes.
China announced sanctions on 28 Trump administration officials and advisers who have “seriously violated China's sovereignty,” according to a Jan. 20 statement by China's Foreign Ministry. The sanctions target former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, former national security adviser Robert O’Brien, former White House adviser Peter Navarro and others. The sanctions include a ban on traveling to mainland China, Hong Kong and Macau and will prohibit the former officials from “doing business with China.”
China’s Foreign Ministry imposed retaliatory sanctions against U.S. officials, lawmakers and entities for the State Department’s decision this month to designate Chinese and Hong Kong officials (see 2101150038). China sanctioned U.S. executive branch officials, members of Congress and nongovernmental organizations that “behaved egregiously” on Hong Kong-related issues, a ministry spokesperson said Jan. 18 during a regular agency press conference, according to a transcript it provided. She did not provide names. China urged the U.S. to “stop meddling with Hong Kong affairs.” The move follows Chinese announcements last year of similar retaliatory sanctions against U.S. officials (see 2012100022). The White House didn’t comment.
The State Department sanctioned a Russian entity and a vessel involved in the construction of the Russian gas pipeline Nord Stream 2 (see 2008110016 and 2007150021). The sanctions target KVT-RUS and the vessel Fortuna, the State Department said Jan. 19. The two were designated under the Countering America’s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act. State said it will consider “further actions in the near term” to target the pipeline.
The State Department expanded the scope of its sanctions authorities on Iran’s metals sector (see 1905080065) by identifying 15 materials used in the country’s nuclear, military and ballistic missile programs, a Jan. 15 news release said. The agency said people or companies that “knowingly transfer” the materials are now sanctionable under the Iran Freedom and Counter-Proliferation Act. The State Department also continued its sanctions authority targeting Iran’s construction sector after determining that the U.S.-sanctioned Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps still controls the sector.
The State Department released a notice Jan. 19 outlining sanctions against a person and an entity involved in the prevention of a ceasefire in northern Syria. The notice targets Syrian militia commander Saqr Rustom and the Syrian National Defense Forces. The sanctions were effective Nov. 9, 2020.