The U.K. amended three entries under its ISIL (Da'esh) and al-Qaida sanctions regime Sept. 22. The Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation updated aliases in the listings for Taha Ibrahim Abdallah Bakr Al Khuwayt, former ISIL governor of the al-Jazira province; Amir Muhammad Sa'id Abdal-Rahman Al-Salbi, ISIL leader; and Nurjaman Isamuddin Riduan, senior leader of Jemaah Islamiyah.
The Netherlands' Fiscal Information and Investigation Service (FIOD) arrested an employee of the Dutch defense department along with another individual for allegedly circumventing the nation's sanctions on Russia, FIOD announced Sept. 15, according to an unofficial translation. The agency said it conducted a search of the second man's home, business premises and storage space, finding large sums of cash, aircraft parts, weapons, cartridge holders and ammunition. The searches came as part of an investigation of an unnamed Dutch company that exports aircraft parts to Russia in violation of the Netherlands' sanctions regime.
The EU General Court on Sept. 20 rejected Russian businessman Alexey Mordashov's application to annul his sanctions listing, according to an unofficial translation. The court said the EU didn't err in finding that Mordashov is an influential businessman in sectors of the Russian government, rejecting his challenges to the process, reasoning and proportionality.
The Russian government imposed a temporary restriction on the export of motor gasoline and diesel fuel on Sept. 21, according to an unofficial translation. The government said the move was made to "stabilize fuel prices on the domestic market," reducing prices for consumers. As part of the announcement, daily monitoring of fuel purchases for agricultural producers with "prompt adjustment of volumes" has also been established.
The U.K. on Sept. 19 amended one entry under its Russia sanctions list and corrected three others to "remove reference to transport sanctions." The Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation amended the listing for Mikhail Fridman to show that he is sanctioned, given that he worked as a director of Alfa Group, which operates in the Russian financial services sector. The corrections were issued for Zarakh Iliev, owner of transport company Kievskaya Ploshchad; Igor Makarov, director of Reywood Holdings; and Iskander Makhmudov, president of Ural Mining and Metallurgical Co.
The U.K. suspended its collection of antidumping duties on ceramic tableware and kitchenware from China for exporter Hunan Jewelmoon Ceramics Co. after conducting an additional exporter review. The suspension takes effect Sept. 21 and excludes "ceramic condiment or spice mills and their ceramic grinding parts, ceramic coffee mills, ceramic knife sharpeners, ceramic sharpeners, ceramic kitchen tools to be used for cutting, grinding, grating, slicing, scraping and peeling, and cordierite ceramic pizza-stones of a kind used for baking pizza or bread."
The U.K. Home Office on Sept. 15 designated the Russian mercenary organization Wagner Group as a terrorist group. The decision "comes into force with immediate effect" and makes supporting the group a criminal offense with a potential maximum sentence of 14 years in prison, which can be issued alongside a fine.
A recent increase in the U.K.’s alcohol tax rate may “challenge” U.S. alcohol exports to the country, although it’s “too early to tell” how much of an impact the change will have, USDA’s Foreign Agricultural Service said in a Sept. 18 report. The new duty, effective Aug. 1, is an excise tax charged at the point of production or importation of drinks exceeding 1.2% alcohol by volume, USDA said, and could lead to a shift toward more purchases of “alternative alcoholic beverage categories.” Drinks with ABV above 8.5% now face a $35.67 tax for each liter of pure alcohol in the product, the agency said, adding that products with lower alcohol content but that previously faced higher taxes due to their type of alcohol will now face lower taxes.
A group of European countries not in the EU aligned with a recent sanctions decision from the bloc involving the illegal annexation of Crimea and Sevastopol. In June, the European Council extended the sanctions until June 23, 2024. The countries of North Macedonia, Montenegro, Albania, Ukraine, Moldova, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Georgia, Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway also imposed the decision, the council said.
The EU General Court's Grand Chamber on Sept. 13 rejected the Venezuelan government's challenge of the EU's Venezuela sanctions regime. The court said the European Council "relied on credible and reliable information" to assess the situation in Venezuela, which included "brutal repression" by the government. The court also said Venezuelan reports showing its government prosecuted these human rights abuses weren't enough to reveal a "manifest error" in the council's decision. The sanctions regime itself didn't violate international law, the court added, nor was it an illegal countermeasure because the sanctions weren't meant to be a reaction to an "internationally wrongful act imputable" to the Venezuelan government.