A New York lobbying firm agreed to pay about $12,000 for violations of the Global Terrorism Sanctions Regulations, the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control said in a Jan. 21 notice. The firm, Park Strategies, LLC, violated U.S. sanctions when it signed a contract and received payments from Al-Barakaat Group of Companies Somalia Limited, which was designated a Specially Designated Global Terrorist by OFAC in 2001. The contract required Park Strategies to provide lobbying services for Al-Barakaat, which were “outside the scope” of authorized activities specified in the Treasury’s general license for legal services.
The Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control renewed two Venezuela-related general licenses, according to a Jan. 17 notice. General License No. 8E, which replaces No. 8D, authorizes certain transactions between Petroleos de Venezuela and Chevron, Haliburton, Schlumberger Limited, Baker Hughes and Weatherford International through 12:01 a.m. on April 22. General License No. 5B, which replaces No. 5A, states that certain transactions relating to the PdVSA “8.5 Percent Bond” are authorized on or after April 22.
The Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control amended a Venezuela-related general license to extend the authorization period for certain activities with Globovision Tele C.A. or Globovision Tele CA, Corp., OFAC said in a Jan. 7 notice. The two entities are controlled by Gustavo Adolfo Perdomo Rosales and Raul Antonio Gorrin Belisario, who were sanctioned by OFAC in January 2019. General License No. 6A, which replaces General License No. 6, authorizes certain activities with the two entities or any entities they own by 50 percent or more until Jan. 21. The general license was previously scheduled to expire Jan. 8.
A lack of export control harmonization and an uneven playing field across the European Union are increasingly hurting Europe’s semiconductor industry, said Aude Jalabert, a trade compliance manager for Infineon Technologies and a member of the European Semiconductor Industry Association. The export licensing and control regimes across EU member states are mainly marred by inconsistencies, language barriers and a lack of staffing, Jalabert said.
The Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control renewed a license authorizing certain transactions with COSCO Shipping Tanker (Dalian) Co. and amended three Iran-related frequently asked questions, OFAC said in a Dec. 19 notice. General License K-1, which replaced General License K, authorizes transactions relating to the maintenance or wind-down of dealings with the COSCO subsidiary until Feb. 4, 2020. The license was previously set to expire Dec. 20.
The Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control removed sanctions imposed on Ventspils Freeport Authority and amended a general license to reflect the change, according to a Dec. 18 notice. Ventspils was designated Dec. 9 for being owned by a sanctioned Latvian oligarch (see 1912090019), but is being removed from U.S. sanctions because the Latvian government passed legislation “effectively ending” the oligarch’s ownership, Treasury said in a Dec. 18 press release. OFAC also replaced Global Magnitsky General License 1 with General License 1A, which removes any mention of the Ventspils Freeport Authority.
A Texas aviation consultant violated U.S. terrorism sanctions when it entered into a contract with Mahan Air, Iran’s sanctioned airline, the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control said in a Dec. 12 notice. The company, Aero Sky Aircraft Maintenance, was issued a finding of violation by OFAC after it violated U.S. Global Terrorism Sanctions Regulations in 2016 for “dealing in the property and interests in property” of Mahan Air, the notice said. Aero Sky eventually filed for bankruptcy and dissolved, Treasury said. OFAC released details of the violations because they would have “justified a strong civil monetary penalty.”
The Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control sanctioned more than 40 people and entities involved in corruption networks in Europe, Asia and Latin America, and issued a general license to allow for wind-down activities, according to a Dec. 9 notice.
Chubb Limited, a Swiss holding company, was fined about $65,000 for more than 20,000 violations of the Cuban Assets Control Regulations, the Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control said in an enforcement notice. The violations were the responsibility of ACE Limited -- an insurance and reinsurance service provider with locations in Switzerland, U.S. and Britain -- which merged with Chubb Corp. in 2016 to form Chubb Limited.
The United Kingdom's Department for International Trade issued new and amended open general export licenses and open general trade control licenses to stop new registrations for certain licenses to Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Egypt, Jordan, Kuwait, Sudan and the United Arab Emirates, according to a Dec. 5 notice. The DIT is also no longer approving export licenses to Turkey for goods that may have military uses in Syria, the notice said. The changes are in effect “until further notice.”