Britain's Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation issued two reports on Sept. 5 on the country’s asset-freezing regime. The first report covers U.K. sanctions from January through March and the second report covers sanctions from April through June. The reports include the total value of assets that were frozen during the two quarters as well as statistics on new designations, delistings and licenses.
Britain's Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation on Sept. 5 issued a guidance on complying with frozen-assets reporting. The guidance includes information on how people or companies should report sanctioned property and how companies should conduct “ongoing compliance” to ensure they’re not violating sanctions laws.
The Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control issued a general license authorizing certain transactions with Venezuela and amended a Venezuela-related Frequently Asked Question, OFAC said in a Sept. 9 notice. General License No. 34 allows certain transactions with Venezuelan government officials if they are U.S. citizens, residents, have U.S. visas or are former Venezuelan government employees. The FAQ, number 680, is amended to address GL 34 implications and deals with which transactions with Venezuelan government employees are blocked.
The Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control updated the Cuban Assets Control Regulations to eliminate certain transactions that were previously authorized by a general license, OFAC said in a notice. The update also revises and removes certain authorizations for remittances to Cuba. The changes take effect Oct. 9.
The European Union Permanent Representatives Committee will extend sanctions on people and entities designated for threatening the sovereignty of Ukraine, according to a post on the EU Sanctions blog. The extended sanctions are awaiting approval by the EU Council before they expire on Sept. 15, the post said.
The State Department sanctioned Liviu Nicolae Dragnea, the former speaker of the Romanian Chamber of Deputies, for involvement in “significant corruption,” according to a Sept. 5 press release. The State Department is also sanctioning Dragnea’s two children: Valentin Stefan Dragnea and Maria Alexandra Dragnea.
The Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control updated a frequently asked question and issued two new FAQs to provide guidance on the “bunkering of non-Iranian and Iranian vessels carrying goods to or from Iran,” OFAC said in a Sept. 5 notice. The FAQs address various scenarios when providing bunkering services to: Iranian ships, non-Iranian ships carrying sanctioned cargo, and non-Iranian ships carrying non-sanctioned cargo to or from Iran.
Iran’s foreign ministry sanctioned the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, a Washington-based think tank, Iran said in a Sept. 24 press release. Iran said it placed the FDD on its sanctions list because it is involved in “designing, imposing and intensifying the impacts of” U.S. sanctions against Iran. In a statement, the FDD said it “conducts independent research and analysis on national security issues” and considers any announcement from Iran's Islamic Republic regime of its inclusion on a blacklist a “badge of honor.”
The Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control is seeking comments on its continuing information collection for its Hizballah Financial Sanctions Regulations Report on Closure by U.S. Financial Institutions of Correspondent Accounts and Payable-Through Accounts, OFAC said in a notice. OFAC is seeking comments about whether the report is “necessary for the proper performance of the functions” of OFAC, the “accuracy of the agency’s estimate of the burden of the collection of information,” ways to “enhance the quality” of the information collection, ways to “minimize the burden of the collection of information on respondents and estimated costs “of services to provide information.” Comments are due Nov. 5.
The Treasury’s Sept. 3 sanctions against three space-related Iranian entities were aimed at curbing Iran’s nuclear development and missile programs, the State Department said. The three sanctioned entities -- the Iran Space Agency, the Iran Space Research Center and the Astronautics Research Institute (see 1909030054) -- are all run by the Iranian government and develop technologies that can be used in Iranian missile systems, the State Department said. Technologies such as space launch vehicles are virtually identical and interchangeable with those used in intercontinental ballistic missiles, and when put to use in the civilian space program allow Iran’s space agencies “to gain experience with various technologies” needed to develop rocket-propelled weapons delivery systems, the U.S. said.