The Office of Foreign Assets Control issued Russia-related general licenses 7A, 26A, 31 and 32 on May 5. The licenses allow emergency overflight and landings of U.S. aircraft in Russia and the filing and prosecution of infringement of various intellectual property protection, as well as the wind-down of transactions with Amsterdam Trade Bank NV and Sberbank subsidiaries through 12:01 a.m. EDT July 12. OFAC also published one new frequently asked question on Afghanistan-related sanctions and updated one FAQ on Ukraine-/Russia-related sanctions.
OFAC sanction activity
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The Office of Foreign Assets Control has issued Russia-related sanctions General Licence 30. The license authorizes transactions involving new debt or new equity with Gazprom Germania through 12:01 a.m. EDT pn Sept. 30. Prior to the license, Directive 3 had blocked new debt and equity transactions with Gazprom-related entities, and several other Russian financial institutions, after March 26.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control amended and reissued its Ukraine-related sanctions regulations, the agency said in a final rule. The action will replace the regulations first published on May 8, 2014, with a more “comprehensive” set of regulations, which includes more information on general licenses and other “regulatory provisions that will provide further guidance to the public," OFAC said. The rule, effective May 2, also changes the title of the regulations to the Ukraine-/Russia-Related Sanctions Regulations and incorporates four directives related to sectoral sanctions, among other revisions. OFAC also revised several frequently asked questions for the regulations.
Export Compliance Daily is providing readers with the top stories from last week in case you missed them. You can find any article by searching the title or by clicking on the hyperlinked reference number.
Toll Group Holdings, the Australian international logistics company fined earlier this week for sanctions violations, takes "compliance seriously” and has “acted to keep this from happening again," managing director Thomas Knudsen said in an April 25 email. The company's $6.13 million settlement with the Office of Foreign Assets Control covered liability for nearly 3,000 violations of several U.S. sanctions programs, including illegal payments connected to sea, air and rail shipments through multiple highly sanctioned countries, including North Korea, Iran and Syria (see 2204250015).
The Office of Foreign Assets Control fined Toll Holdings, a Melbourne, Australia-based international freight and logistics company, more than $6.13 million for nearly 3,000 violations of multiple U.S. sanctions programs. OFAC said Toll received illegal payments connected to sea, air and rail shipments through multiple highly sanctioned countries, including North Korea, Iran and Syria. The transactions included sanctioned Iranian airline Mahan Air (see 2111190006) and Iran-based Hafiz Darya Shipping Lines.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control on April 22 updated the entry for North Korean cyber-criminal group Lazarus Group. OFAC updated the Lazarus Group entry to include "three additional virtual currency wallet addresses" linked to the entity, an agency spokesperson said April 22. "Identification of these wallets will make clear to other VC actors that by transacting with them, they risk exposure to U.S. sanctions," the spokesperson said.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control last week fined Colorado-based Newmont Corp. and Florida-based Chisu International Corp. after the two mining companies bought Cuban-origin “explosives and explosive accessories” from a third-party vendor. The agency announced a $141,442 settlement with Newmont and a $45,908 settlement with Chisu for violating the Cuban Assets Control Regulations.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control on April 20 issued guidance for holders of credit cards issued by sanctioned Russian financial institutions. The agency said U.S. operators of credit card systems are blocked from processing transactions involving certain sanctioned foreign financial institutions unless exempt by OFAC. Foreign operators of credit card systems whose payment cards are issued by sanctioned banks also risk violating U.S. sanctions if they allow those cards to be used in the U.S., OFAC said.