The European Commission recently issued updated guidance for a requirement that will soon force EU exporters to insert clauses in their contracts that bar reexports of certain sensitive goods to Russia. The document offers guidance on how EU companies should comply with the “no reexport to Russia” clause, how it impacts contracts already in place, how the EU plans to enforce the requirement, what the clause’s wording should include, and more.
Computing chips and other high-tech equipment made by American companies continue to flow to Russia’s war machine despite U.S. efforts to stop them with export controls and sanctions, Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., said Feb. 27.
Export Controls Australia Group, a new nonprofit for export controls professionals, aims to connect industry, government and others to “collaboratively navigate the complex landscape of export controls,” the group said on its website. Chief Operations Officer Amy McDonnell said the group is the “first Australian national industrial advocacy body focused exclusively on export controls and sanctions for Australian” defense, dual use and research organizations. It will “fill what we saw as a gap in the market for export control advocacy and professionalisation,” she said in a post last week on LinkedIn.
The European Council extended until Feb. 28, 2025, its sanctions regime on Belarus for its support of Russia's invasion of Ukraine. The one-year extension was made as part of an annual review of the sanctions on Belarus, the council said Feb. 26. The restrictions include an asset freeze on 233 people and 37 entities, along with sectoral restrictions on the financial sector, trade, trade in dual-use goods and technology, and more.
China criticized the U.S. decision last week to sanction Chinese companies for allegedly helping Russia evade trade restrictions (see 2402230035). A Foreign Ministry spokesperson said Feb. 26 that China “maintains an objective and impartial position” on the Russia-Ukraine war, and “normal trade and economic cooperation between China and Russia is not targeted at any third party or subject to any interference by any third party.” The spokesperson said Beijing “firmly opposes illegal unilateral sanctions against Chinese companies and will take necessary measures to resolutely protect the legitimate rights and interests of Chinese companies.” The remarks were in response to a TASS news agency question during a regular press conference in Beijing.
The U.S. Supreme Court on Feb. 26 said it won't review whether whistleblower Brutus Trading should've been granted a hearing by a lower court in its case accusing U.K.-based Standard Chartered Bank of violating sanctions against Iran.
The Biden administration is misusing its Latin America sanctions authorities by targeting U.S. partners and ignoring misbehavior by less friendly countries, eight Republican senators told President Joe Biden.
Canada and Australia last week announced a range of new Russia-related sanctions to mark the two-year anniversary of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
The Bureau of Industry and Security added a Chinese electronics company and a Canada-headquartered technology software company to the Entity List for trying to illegally acquire U.S. items or for being involved in other activities that are “contrary” to U.S. national security and foreign policy, the agency said Feb. 26. It also removed one United Arab Emirates-based entity from the Entity List.
The U.K. corrected or amended one entry each under its sanctions regimes covering Russia, ISIL (Da'esh) and Al-Qaida, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and the Central African Republic. The Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation updated the listings for Ilya Borisovich Brodskiy, 'Abd Al-Rahman Muhammad Mustafa Al-Qaduli, Willy Ngoma and Konstantin Aleksendrovitch Pikalov, respectively.