The Office of Foreign Assets Control fined TD Bank about $115,000 for two separate instances of sanctions violations, the agency said Dec. 23. The bank illegally processed nearly 1,500 transactions that violated U.S. sanctions against North Korea and maintained two accounts for more than four years for a U.S. resident who was sanctioned under Foreign Narcotics Kingpin Sanctions Regulations. OFAC said both cases resulted from “multiple sanctions compliance breakdowns,” including human errors and screening deficiencies.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control on Dec. 22 sanctioned three people and two entities for operating a Brazil-based support network for al-Qaida. The designations target Haytham Ahmad Shukri Ahmad Al-Maghrabi, Mohamed Sherif Mohamed Mohamed Awadd, Ahmad Al-Khatib and two companies: Home Elegance Comercio de Moveis Eireli and Enterprise Comercio de Moveis e Intermediacao de Negocios Eireli.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control published a new fact sheet, three new general licenses and other guidance to help humanitarian aid flow more easily to Afghanistan. The six-page guidance describes the various general licenses available for transactions involving Afghanistan, which now cover certain U.S. government activities, transactions involving international organizations and other humanitarian work. The guidance comes after months of banks and non-governmental organizations asking OFAC to provide more assurances that they won’t be caught by sanctions (see 2109020064).
The Office of Foreign Assets Control on Dec. 21 removed one person listed under two entries from its Specially Designated Nationals List. The agency deleted the entry for Rodrick Grech, also known as Roderick Grech, a Malta national who was originally sanctioned in 2018 for ties to illegal fuel smuggling between Libya and Europe. OFAC didn’t release more information.
New U.S. and European sanctions against Belarus could have broad implications for companies doing business in the region and could signal more multilateral sanctions in the coming months, law firms said this month. The U.S.’s recent restrictions are particularly noteworthy because of a strict new prohibition on certain transactions involving Belarusian sovereign debt, the firms said.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control sanctioned Ali Darassa, the leader of a militia group in the Central African Republic, for human rights violations, the agency said Dec. 17. Darassa is the leader of the Union for Peace in the Central African Republic, whose militants have killed and displaced thousands of people in the region since 2014, the agency said.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control added eight Chinese technology firms to its investment blacklist, including drone maker DJI, for helping the Chinese government track and detain Muslim minorities in Xinjiang. The move, announced Dec. 16, also banned investments in Cloudwalk Technology Co., Dawning Information Industry Co., Leon Technology Company, Megvii Technology, Netposa Technologies, Xiamen Meiya Pico Information Co. and Yitu, all of which are already on the Commerce Department’s Entity List.
The U.S. plans to send a delegation to the United Arab Emirates this week to discuss sanctions compliance and warn businesses and banks against facilitating Iranian commerce, a State Department spokesperson said. The delegation will be led by Andrea Gacki, director of the Office of Foreign Assets Control, and include other Treasury and State Department officials.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control on Dec. 10 issued a new general license authorizing certain non-commercial, personal remittances to Afghanistan. General License No. 16 authorizes certain transactions involving the Taliban, the Haqqani Network, or any entity they own by 50% or more if those transactions are “ordinarily incident and necessary to the transfer” of personal remittances to Afghanistan.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control imposed investment restrictions on SenseTime Group Ltd., a major Chinese technology company, and sanctioned 15 people and 10 other companies for human rights abuses, the agency said Dec. 10. SenseTime, which had prepared to price shares Dec. 10 in its initial public offering in Hong Kong, will now be subject to a U.S. investment ban and added to OFAC’s list of companies with ties to China’s military (see 2106030067).