The Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control sanctioned Iranian officials and a group controlled by the country’s law enforcement authority for human rights abuses, Treasury said May 20. The designations target Abdolreza Rahmani Fazli, Iran’s interior minister, seven senior officials of Iran’s Law Enforcement Forces and a commander in Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. The sanctions also target the LEF Cooperative Foundation -- an “economic collaborative” controlled by the LEF -- along with its director and board of trustees.
The Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control sanctioned China-based Shanghai Saint Logistics Limited for acting as a general sales agent for Mahan Air (see 1912050032), the U.S.-designated Iranian airline, according to a May 19 press release. The designation of Shanghai Saint Logistics is the seventh designation of a general sales agent to Mahan Air since 2018, OFAC said. The company provides freight booking and other services for Mahan Air flights. “We will not hesitate to target those entities that continue to maintain commercial relationships with Mahan Air,” Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said in a statement.
The Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control updated 490 North Korea-related entries on its Specially Designated Nationals List, according to a May 13 notice. The update stems from the 2020 National Defense Authorization Act, which modified the North Korea Sanctions and Policy Enhancement Act to block foreign subsidiaries of U.S. financial institutions “from knowingly engaging in transactions with” SDNs “that have been designated under North Korea-related authorities,” OFAC said. OFAC introduced a “descriptive text” to “clarify to the private sector what SDNs have this prohibition” and added the descriptive text to the SDN entries.
Nynas AB, a joint venture between biofuel producer Neste and Petroleos de Venezuela, S.A., is no longer designated by the Treasury Department after a “corporate restructuring” by the company, Nynas said May 12. The company’s restructuring “severs control by blocked persons and reduces the interest of blocked persons below 50 percent,” the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control said in a May 12 notice in which it announced it was revoking a general license for Nynas (see 2005120028). OFAC clarified that U.S. companies and people no longer need an authorization to deal with Nynas “provided such activities do not involve blocked persons.”
The Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control revoked Venezuela General License 13E, which authorized certain transactions involving Nynas AB, a joint venture between biofuel producer Neste and Petroleos de Venezuela, according to a May 12 notice. The license was scheduled to expire May 14 (see 2004030043). OFAC also updated General Licenses 3H and 9G to remove references to Nynas AB. The agency also made “conforming technical updates” to two frequently asked questions to reflect the revocation of the license.
The Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control issued several “administrative updates” to certain Specially Designated Nationals List records, according to a May 7 notice. The updates “reclassified certain aliases as weak.” The notice contains the unique identification numbers (UIDs) for each of the affected SDN entries.
The Treasury Department fined a Kansas animal nutrition company more than $250,000 for illegally exporting agricultural goods to Cuba, which violated U.S. sanctions, according to a May 6 notice. The company, BIOMIN America, completed 30 illegal sales to Cuba between 2012 and 2017 and did not have a sanctions compliance program, the Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control said. If BIOMIN had consulted with OFAC before the sales took place, the company may have received a license, the agency said.
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Two Iranian nationals were charged with violating U.S. export controls and sanctions after they tried to help Iranian entities buy a petroleum tanker, the Justice Department said May 1. Amir Dianat and Kamran Lajmiri allegedly concealed details about the transaction from the seller, financial institutions and the U.S. government, the agency said, and failed to disclose that the tanker was destined for Iran. Both were charged with violating the International Emergency Economic Powers Act and the Iranian Transactions and Sanctions Regulations. The U.S. also filed a civil forfeiture action against Dainat for about $12.3 million, saying the funds were used in a money-laundering scheme to buy the tanker. The scheme involved the National Iranian Oil Company, the National Iranian Tanker Company and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps-Qods Force, all on the Specially Designated Nationals list. The tanker was valued at more than $10 million, Justice said.
American Express violated U.S. sanctions when it processed about $35,000 worth of transactions for a designated person in 2015, the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control said April 30. OFAC issued a “finding of violation” for American Express Travel Related Services Company but did not impose a fine.