The State Department is designating the mayor of Durres, Albania, and his immediate family members for “involvement in significant corruption,” the agency said in a July 30 press release. Vangjush Dako is being sanctioned under the Department of State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs Appropriations Act.
The State Department added four sub-entities owned by the Cuban military to the Cuba Restricted List, the agency said in a July 26 press release and a notice in the Federal Register. The U.S. bans all financial transactions between any entity on the list and U.S. people or companies. The State Department notice did not specify which entities were added but provided a full list of restricted entities.
The Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control sanctioned a North Korean citizen in Vietnam for being a North Korean political official and working for a sanctioned North Korean entity, Treasury said in a July 29 press release. Kim Su Il had “ties” to the Workers’ Party of Korea and is an employee of the Munitions Industry Department (MID), which is sanctioned by both the United Nations and the U.S. for being involved with North Korea’s missile program, the press release said. Treasury said Kim Su Il worked for the MID in Vietnam and has exported “anthracite coal, titanium ore concentrate” and imported and exported “various other goods, including raw materials, to and from North Korea.” He also exported Vietnamese products to China, North Korea and other countries, the press release said. Along with trading, Kim Su Il also chartered ships.
The U.S. announced sanctions on people, property and entities in Mali contributing to the country’s terrorism, drug trafficking, human trafficking and human rights abuses, the White House said in a July 26 executive order. The sanctions impose asset freezes, restrict U.S.-related travel and block certain donations to Mali by anyone targeted with the measures.
The Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control issued an amended general license on July 26 that authorizes certain transactions with Petroleos de Venezuela, S.A., Venezuela's state-run oil company. General License 8B, replacing General License 8A, authorizes certain transactions made before July 26 that are necessary to maintain agreements with Venezuela. The license authorizes the transactions for Chevron Corp., Halliburton, Schlumberger Ltd., Baker Hughes and Weatherford International, the license says. The transactions are authorized until Oct. 25.
The Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control sanctioned a Colombian national, his business associates, family members and a collection of shell companies that has propped up the Nicolas Maduro regime through food imports and distribution in Venezuela, Treasury said in a July 25 press release. OFAC sanctioned Alex Nain Saab Moran, nine other associates and 13 entities for participating in the scheme.
The U.S. is extending a national emergency to continue sanctions on “transnational criminal organizations” for one year, the White House said in a July 22 press release. Under the authority of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, the sanctions target criminal organizations that threaten “international political and economic systems,” some of which are “entrenched in the operations of foreign governments and the international financial system,” the press release said. The organizations “continue to pose an unusual and extraordinary threat,” the White House said. The first executive order declaring this national emergency was on July 24, 2011.
Britain published guidance that offers insight into how it would transfer European Union sanctions on Burundi and the Republic of Guinea into the United Kingdom's sanctions regime in the case of a no-deal Brexit, the U.K. said on July 23. In its guidance on Guinea sanctions, the U.K. said the purpose of the measures would be to lead the Guinea government to “investigate properly the violent repression in Guinea” on Sept. 28, 2009, and bring “criminal proceedings” on those responsible. The U.K. said the purpose of the Burundi sanctions is to encourage the country’s government to “respect democratic principles,” “bring about a peaceful solution to the political situation in Burundi,” “refrain from policies” that “repress civil society” and abide by international human rights laws.
The U.S. imposed sanctions on a Chinese oil company and its CEO for buying crude oil from Iran, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said July 22. The announcement sanctioned Zhuhai Zhenrong Company Limited and CEO Youmin Li, Pompeo said.The sanctions were originally announced by the Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control on July 22, but the agency did not immediately release detailed information about the sanctions (see 1907220049). Pompeo said the sanctions are part of the U.S.’s “maximum pressure campaign” on Iran.
The Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control issued an advisory on Iran’s “deceptive practices” in the civil aviation industry, detailing Iran’s use of commercial airlines for terrorism, weapons programs and sanctions violations. The eight-page advisory, issued July 23, lists several practices U.S. companies should be aware of to avoid violating U.S. sanctions against Iran. The advisory also reviews the U.S.’s current Iran sanctions regime as well as penalties for committing violations.