The U.K. last week updated a general license authorizing insolvency-related payments and activities involving Russian aircraft leasing companies GTLK Europe and GTLK Capital. The changes add new definitions for "notes, Noteholders, Trustee, Relevant non-UK Institution, UK Prohibited Persons and UK Prohibited Persons Account," clarified that certain funds must be held in frozen accounts, revised a notification requirement and a record-keeping requirement, and added a new reporting requirement.
The European Commission is adding multiple countries to its list of high-risk jurisdictions with “strategic deficiencies” in their national anti-money laundering and countering the financing of terrorism regimes. The additions are Algeria, Angola, Ivory Coast, Kenya, Laos, Lebanon, Monaco, Namibia, Nepal and Venezuela. The EU also will delist Barbados, Gibraltar, Jamaica, Panama, the Philippines, Senegal, Uganda and the United Arab Emirates.
The Defense Department is reviewing whether the Australia-U.K.-U.S. (AUKUS) security partnership that began under the Biden administration is aligned with President Donald Trump’s “America First” agenda, a defense spokesperson said June 13.
Rep. Joe Wilson, R-S.C., a senior member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, led a bill June 12 that would repeal a 2019 law that sanctioned Syria's Bashar al-Assad regime for war crimes.
David Peters, President Donald Trump’s nominee to be assistant secretary of commerce for export enforcement (see 2504300061), said June 12 that he would “aggressively” enforce U.S. export controls to ensure sensitive American technology doesn’t end up in the hands of adversaries.
The U.S. has the power to force some manufacturing out of Canada and Mexico and have it locate in the U.S., so that those cars or other products avoid tariffs, a think-tank analyst said at a Washington International Trade Association event.
Australia's Sanctions Office this month issued new and updated "guidance notes" about various sanctions laws, including information about compliance obligations for Australian people and entities. The new documents cover sanctions involving advanced technologies, the financial sector, employment, the ocean shipping industry, Russia-related restrictions, and more.
The U.K.'s Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation last week removed Hajjaj Bin Fahd Al Ajmi from its ISIL (Da’esh) and al-Qaida sanctions list. He was sanctioned for his ties to Al-Nusrah Front for the People of the Levant, a group linked to terrorism. The U.N. Security Council also delisted Ajmi (see 2506100014).
The U.K. on June 13 removed one entry from its Russia sanctions regime. The Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation delisted Aleksey Leonidovich Fisun, a member of the Supervisory Board Sovcombank, from the Russia restrictions.
The Council of the European Union last week sanctioned three people and one entity for undermining democracy and the rule of law in Guatemala. The designations target the Foundation Against Terrorism, its president, Ricardo Rafael Mendez Ruiz Valdes, and its legal representative, Raul Amilcar Falla Ovalle, for their involvement in the persecution and intimidation of the media, lawyers, judges and prosecutors. The council said the newly sanctioned have begun criminal investigations against "justice operators, journalists and representatives of the government, and engaged in the intimidation of civil society and the judiciary."