The Council of the European Union on May 27 sanctioned two people and one entity involved in Russian war propaganda, including “propaganda actions targeted at civil society in the EU and its neighbouring countries.” The designations target media outlet Voice of Europe; Artem Marchevskyi, a "concealed head” of Voice of Europe; and Viktor Medvedchuk, a political figure who has “promoted policies and actions intended to erode [the] credibility and legitimacy” of Ukraine.
The Council of the European Union on May 28 renewed for another year its sanctions measures on Syria, also extending the humanitarian exemption in the restrictions regime. The sanctions now run until June 1, 2025, and cover 316 people and 86 entities. The humanitarian exemption was originally introduced in February 2023, following an earthquake that hit Turkey and Syria. The council also removed five deceased people and "one other individual" from the sanctions list.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control sanctioned three Chinese nationals for their ties to a “residential proxy botnet” called 911 S5 that allows hackers to hide their locations and evade fraud detection systems. The designations target Yunhe Wang, Jingping Liu and Yanni Zheng along with Spicy Code Company Limited, a company used by Wang to buy real estate, and Tulip Biz Pattaya Group Company Limited and Lily Suites Company Limited, other companies owned by Wang.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control deleted two aircraft from its Specially Designated Nationals List that were originally added for their ties to designated Iranian airlines Mahan Air and Pouya Air. One removed plane has aircraft registration number EP-MND (linked to Mahan air), the other is EP-GOM (linked to Pouya Air). The agency didn't release more information.
The U.K. last week updated a general license and guidance involving its price cap and servicing restrictions on Russian oil. The country’s Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation said the changes offer more clarity on certain exclusions and exceptions under the price cap, including by updating page six of the general license to clarify what type of services can be provided with Russian oil purchased at or below the cap. The agency also updated sections 4.1, 4.2 and 4.4 of its price cap guidance.
The U.K.’s Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation this week sanctioned three people with ties to al-Shabaab, the Somalia-based and al-Qaida-linked terrorist group. The designations mirror an earlier announcement made by the U.N. Security Council (see 2405220012) and target Abdikadir Mohamed Abdikadir, Mohamed Mohamud Mire and Mohamed Omar Mohamed.
A December executive order that gave the U.S. broader authority to sanction financial institutions involved in shipping goods to Russia has had a “meaningful impact” on Russia’s military industrial supply chains so far, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said this week.
Canada this week announced another round of sanctions against Russia, targeting two people and six entities that the country said have helped ship weapons, missiles and other military items from North Korea to Russia. Canada said it has “recorded evidence” that the Kremlin used the weapons in its war against Ukraine last year and this year. The two people designated are “senior representatives of Russian enterprises that are closely linked” to the Russian military, and the entities are Russian shipping companies that own or operate planes and cargo vessels that were used to transport the weapons.
U.K. defense minister Grant Shapps said he has evidence that China is supplying Russia with lethal aid for its war in Ukraine.
The U.N. Security Council this week sanctioned three people with ties to the Somalia-based al-Shabaab, an al-Qaida linked terrorist group. The designations target Abdikadir Mohamed Abdikadir, Mohamed Mohamud Mire and Mohamed Omar Mohamed.