The government of Canada issued the following trade-related notices as of Dec. 11 (note that some may also be given separate headlines):
The Canada Border Services Agency issued a memo on the customs excise duty procedures for cannabis edibles, extracts and topical products. The memo includes a list of proposed excise duty rates and an example of how the customs, federal excise and provincial excise are calculated. “All modifications will be active in the Customs Commercial System (CCS) beginning December 16, 2019,” the agency said.
The Philippines and South Korea expect to agree to a trade deal by mid-2020 as the two sides have made “significant progress” on trade in goods, according to a Dec. 11 report from the Hong Kong Trade Development Council. The two sides are close on a deal regarding the Philippines' export of bananas, garments and auto parts and South Korea’s export of pharmaceuticals, petrochemicals and auto parts, the report said. Agreements have also been reached on rules of origin, and the two sides are “confident” the deal will be completed soon, HKTDC said.
The Commerce Department Bureau of Industry and Security is seeking comments on an information collection used to respond to congressional and industry requests to make “foreign availability determinations” about the Export Administration Regulations, according to a notice. In the information collection, exporters are urged to submit data to “support the contention” that items controlled for national security reasons are “available-in-fact, from a non-U.S. source, in sufficient quantity and of comparable quality so as to render the control ineffective.” Comments are due Feb. 10.
The Commerce Department Bureau of Industry and Security is seeking comments on an information collection related to requests for participation in foreign boycotts against countries friendly to the U.S., according to a notice. BIS analyzes the information to “note changing trends” and decide on actions to take to prevent participation in “foreign restrictive trade practices and boycotts.” Comments are due Feb. 10, 2020.
A bipartisan bill aimed at sanctioning fentanyl traffickers will be included in the 2020 National Defense Authorization Act expected to pass early next week, according to a Dec. 11 press release from Sens. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Tom Cotton, R-Ark. The bill was passed in the Senate in June as part of the must-pass defense authorization bill (see 1906270054). In addition to sanctioning Chinese and other fentanyl traffickers, the Fentanyl Sanctions Act would urge the Trump administration to pursue multilateral sanctions with U.S. partners and to create a commission to report on how to better control shipments of synthetic opioids.
The State Department sanctioned Saudi and Chechen government officials for human rights violations, the agency said Dec. 10. The targets include Mohammed al Otaibi, former consul general of Saudi Arabia in Turkey, and Aslan Iraskhanov, head of the Ministry of Interior Affairs for the city of Grozny in the Chechen Republic of the Russian Federation.
The State Department sanctioned two former Paraguayan government officials due to “significant corruption,” the State Department said Dec. 10. The agency’s sanctions targeted former president of Paraguay’s judicial disciplinary board and senator Oscar Gonzalez Daher and former attorney general Javier Diaz Veron. Also sanctioned were Daher’s immediate family (Nelida Chaves de Gonzalez, Oscar Ruben Gonzalez Chaves and Maria Gonzalez Chaves) and Veron’s family (Maria Selva Morinigo, Yeruti Diaz Morinigo, Manuel Diaz Morinigo, Alejandro Diaz Morinigo and Veron’s minor child).
The Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control sanctioned an Iranian shipping network, its leader and three Mahan Air sales agents, Treasury said in a Dec. 11 press release. The shipping network illegally smuggled “lethal aid” from Iran to Yemen on behalf of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps-Qods Force, Treasury said, and the three sales agents, based in the United Arab Emirates and Hong Kong, were targeted for working for a sanctioned Iranian airline.
President Donald Trump will nominate Jessie Liu to be undersecretary for Terrorism and Financial Crimes, a key sanctions role within the Treasury Department, the White House said Dec. 10. Liu is the U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia and previously served as deputy general counsel for Treasury and in the Justice Department’s National Security Division. The position was previously held by Sigal Mandelker, who resigned in October (see 1910020061).