The Treasury Department this week sanctioned 16 Venezuelan officials that it said have ties to the Nicolas Maduro regime and who obstructed the country’s recent presidential elections (see 2407290044). The designated officials include leaders of the Maduro-aligned National Electoral Council and the Supreme Tribunal of Justice, which Treasury said “impeded a transparent electoral process and the release of accurate election results,” along with military, intelligence and government officials “responsible for intensifying repression through intimidation, indiscriminate detentions, and censorship.” The Biden administration will “continue to use our tools to hold Maduro and his cronies accountable and support the democratic aspirations of the Venezuelan people,” Deputy Treasury Secretary Wally Adeyemo said.
The Council of the European Union on Sept. 12 extended until March 15 sanctions on those responsible for undermining the sovereignty of Ukraine. The restrictions currently cover over 2,200 people and entities. As part of the six-month extension, the council removed two people from the sanctions regime and dropped five deceased people from the list.
The Treasury Department this week sanctioned 10 people and six entities in Iran and Russia involved in trading Iranian weapons and drones, along with four vessels delivering those shipments. The State Department also designated various shipping companies and vessels, including Iran Air, which the agency said is being used to move Western-origin goods to Russia.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control is seeking public comments on information collections involving its Reporting, Procedures and Penalties Regulations; the Cuban Assets Control Regulations; the Iran Financial Sanctions Regulations; and the Hizballah Financial Sanctions Regulations, it said in a notice released Sept. 11. Comments are due Nov. 12.
The U.S. this week sanctioned three people, five companies and two vessels involved in smuggling oil and liquified petroleum gas (LPG) for Hezbollah, and it updated a sanctions advisory for the maritime energy shipping industry to highlight risks from shipments to Syria.
The U.S. this week sanctioned nine Mexicans and 26 Mexico-based entities with ties to a network that steals fuel to generate revenue for the Cartel Jalisco Nueva Generacion, a sanctioned Mexican drug trafficking group. The network has generated “tens of millions of dollars” for the cartel through fuel theft from Mexico’s state-owned petroleum company, Pemex, including by illegally drilling taps into fuel pipelines, stealing from refineries and hijacking tanker trucks, the Treasury Department said.
The U.K. on Sept. 10 added three entries to its Russian sanctions regime and seven people and entities to its Iran sanctions list, the Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation announced in a pair of notices.
The U.S. sanctioned two shipping companies and two vessels last week for their involvement in exports of liquefied natural gas from Russia’s Arctic LNG 2 project, an energy project sanctioned by the U.S. The designations target Gotik Shipping Co and Plio Energy Cargo Shipping OPC PVT LTD, which are the registered owner and commercial manager, respectively, of LNG carrier New Energy. The U.S. also sanctioned the Mulan, an LNG carrier managed and operated by Pilo Energy.
The EU General Court on Sept. 4 upheld the sanctions listing for Samer al-Assad, a cousin of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, after rejecting Samer al-Assad's claim that the EU's listing criteria, which permit sanctions on the president's family members, violates "general principles of EU law."
The EU Court of Justice on Sept. 5 said that a notary doesn't violate sanctions on Russia by authenticating the sale of a property owned by a non-sanctioned Russian company. The court said that authentication services don't amount to the provision of "legal advisory services," which are barred under EU sanctions if provided to "legal persons established in Russia."