The Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control added Ahmad Al-Hamidawi to its Specially Designated Nationals List, according to a Feb. 26 notice. OFAC did not immediately release more information on the designation.
The State Department announced sanctions on 13 entities and people based in China, Iraq, Russia and Turkey under the Iran, North Korea, and Syria Nonproliferation Act, the agency said in a Feb. 25 news release. The sanctions target people and companies that support Iran’s missile program. The State Department said the designations are “two-year discretionary sanctions” and block all U.S. government procurement, government assistance and exports related to the people and companies.
U.S. administration officials will meet with the European Union and Japan next month to lobby for increased scrutiny of transactions involving sensitive technologies, a top Treasury Department official said. The meetings will also feature discussions of recent U.S. reforms to foreign direct investment screening, said Thomas Feddo, Treasury’s assistant secretary of investment security, and come as the U.S. begins to implement those reforms as part of the Foreign Investment Risk Review Modernization Act (see 2001140060). Feddo spoke during a Feb. 26 event hosted by the Asia Society.
The World Customs Organization issued the following releases on commercial trade and related matters:
Morocco issued the second tender of 2020 to import more than 350,000 metric tons of durum wheat from the U.S. under its tariff rate quota, according to a U.S. Department of Agriculture Foreign Agricultural Service report released Feb. 21. Auction results for the imports will be announced March 5, the USDA said, and deliveries must arrive by May 31.
The European Commission received its mandate to officially begin negotiating a trade deal and other agreements with the United Kingdom starting March 2, the commission said Feb. 25. In a separate guidance describing the European Union’s negotiating directives, the commission said it “intends to achieve as much as possible” during the Brexit transition period and prefers a “comprehensive” deal rather than several smaller agreements (see 2001280042). But it also said an extension of the transition period by “1 to 2 years” is possible if a deal cannot be reached in time. The commission also clarified that there remains a risk of a no-deal scenario and urged all U.K. companies to “prepare now” for no longer being part of the EU’s “single market” and customs union.
India and Indonesia hope to increase trade between their countries to $50 billion by 2025, which will include increased market access, a reduction in trade barriers and a commitment to improving agricultural trade, according to an unofficial translation of a Feb. 24 news release from Indonesia’s Ministry of Trade. The Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry specifically requested that Indonesia allow greater market access for Indian exports of raw sugar products, buffalo meat, dairy products and rice, Indonesia said.
A Chinese technology company on the Commerce Department’s Entity List received an exemption from Commerce to buy U.S. goods to counter the coronavirus outbreak, according to a stock filing released Feb. 24. The artificial intelligence company, iFlyTek, which was placed on the Entity List in October (see 1910070076), said it applied for and was granted a “medical material exemption” from Commerce, according to an unofficial translation. The company said the exemption allows it to purchase U.S. medical supplies, along with other goods. A Bureau of Industry and Security spokesperson declined to comment.
China recently issued a series of measures to encourage foreign trade companies to resume business as the country continues battling the coronavirus outbreak, according to a Feb. 25 report from the Hong Kong Trade Development Council. Among several changes, customs authorities will simplify business registration and filing procedures, and expedite inspections and releases of imported production equipment and raw materials, including the use of “machine-assisted inspection” and “out-of-box audits.” China will also expand imports of agricultural products by increasing “the number of countries and registered companies with access to China’s market” as well as the variety of agricultural goods that can be imported. Other measures simplify and relax procedures surrounding exports, quarantine examinations and approvals, trade documentation deadlines and administrative penalties.
A U.S.-sanctioned leader of a Guatemalan drug trafficking group was sentenced to 23 years in prison, the Justice Department said in a Feb. 24 press release. In 2010, Waldemar Lorenzana-Lima was listed as a specially designated narcotics trafficker under the Foreign Narcotics Kingpin Designation Act due to “significant roles” in international trafficking. Lorenzana-Lima and his family allegedly used a family business and agricultural holdings in Guatemala as a front to move the drugs through Central America.