A Russian court based in St. Petersburg on May 18 seized nearly $760 million of assets belonging to UniCredit, Deutsche Bank and Commerzbank, according to the Financial Times. A subsidiary of Russian gas giant Gazprom, RusChemAlliance, had told the court that the three western banks must pay bank guarantees under a contract with German firm Linde. RusChemAlliance's contract with Linde, which concerned the construction of a liquified natural gas processing plant and production facility in St. Petersburg, was paused due to EU sanctions on the Russian company.
The U.K.'s Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation on May 16 said it has "withdrawn" its sanctions regime on Burundi, and it's "no longer in force." The sanctions, initially issued in 2015 and last updated in July 2022, include designations for human rights abuses by those who obstructed "the search for a peacefull solution to the political situation in Burundi."
The EU General Court on May 15 rejected the Russian Direct Investment Fund's (RDIF's) challenge to the bloc's prohibition on investing in projects financed by the fund.
The U.K. on May 17 sanctioned people and companies for their ties to Russia and North Korea, including for helping both countries evade sanctions.
The U.K. on May 17 corrected one entry under its sanctions regime for the Democratic Republic of the Congo and another under its ISIL (Da'esh) and al-Qaida sanctions regime. The changes update identifying information for Sylvestre Mudacumura, commander of the FDLR-FOCA armed rebel group in Congo, and Radulan Sahiron, who is wanted by the Philippines for terrorism offenses.
Syrian businessperson Issam Anbouba remains subject to EU sanctions after the EU General Court on May 15 sustained his listing based on criteria issued in 2023 but annulled the criteria issued in 2022, according to an unofficial translation.
Trade groups representing the ocean freight and logistics industry are warning businesses about a new set of import rules that will soon apply to goods moving into or through Europe. They said companies that don’t comply with the rules when they take effect next month could face shipping disruptions or fines.
The U.K. on May 16 renewed a general license under its Russian sanctions regime that allows British citizens to buy tickets from a sanctioned party for "flights or rail journeys originating in, or within, Russia." It also authorizes activities "reasonably necessary to effect the purchase of such tickets for flights or rail journeys." The license was scheduled to expire May 23 and now runs until May 23, 2026.
Lithuania's customs agency fined an unnamed Lithuanian company over $357,000 for buying and importing goods from sanctioned Russian companies "Nizhnekamsktekhuglerod" and "Nizhnekamskneftekhim," according to an unofficial translation. The former is a technology company, the latter makes synthetic rubber and plastics.
A recent U.K. Supreme Court ruling could have implications for how certain sanctions-related payment issues are treated under force majeure clauses in contracts.