The State Department maintained its designation of Hamas as a Foreign Terrorist Organization, it said in a notice. The agency said circumstances haven’t changed “in such a manner as to warrant revocation of the designation.”
The Office of Foreign Assets Control added two Haitian politicians to its Specially Designated Nationals List in connection with drug trafficking, it said in a Dec. 2 news release. The action comes less than a month after the U.S. and Canada designated two other Haitian politicians (see 2211040064).
The U.S. on Nov. 30 sanctioned four people with ties to terrorist groups. The State Department said the designations target leaders of al-Qa’ida in the Indian Subcontinent (AQIS) and Tehrik-e Taliban Pakistan (TTP). The four are Mufti Hazrat Deroji, Atif Yahya Ghouri, Muhammad Maruf and Osama Mehmood.
At least three vessels, including a Chinese-owned ship, have illegally exported Venezuelan oil and falsified cargo documents to conceal the oil’s origin, Reuters reported Nov. 30. The ships include the Chinese-owned supertanker Young Yong, sanctioned by the U.S. in November (see 2211030036), which loaded oil in Venezuela last year before sailing to the Chinese port of Qingdao with cargo documents that stated the oil was from Malaysia, the report said.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control added three people and two companies to its Specially Designated Nationals List for providing financial services and facilitating weapons procurement for Hezbollah, the agency said Dec. 1.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control this week sanctioned three people for being members of the Workers’ Party of Korea and helping North Korea develop weapons of mass restriction and ballistic missiles. The designations target Jon Il Ho, Yu Jin and Kim Su Gil, OFAC said. Brian Nelson, Treasury's undersecretary for terrorism and financial intelligence, said the sanctions were in response to North Korean missile launches (see Ref:2211070016]).
President Joe Biden signed a memorandum this week stating that the administration will use sanctions, as well as other penalties, to respond to “conflict-related sexual violence” (CRSV). The White House said it will look to designate perpetrators of sexual violence crimes associated with conflicts and give those designations “equal consideration alongside other serious human rights abuses.”
The U.S. plans to use Magnitsky-style human rights sanctions to penalize “environmental criminals” responsible for the deforestation of the Amazon rainforest in Brazil, Reuters reported Nov. 23. Although U.S. officials have discussed with Brazilian President-elect Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva his plans to tackle climate change, there are still “question marks about how he views the plan,” the report said. The U.S. could use sanctions to limit people from using the international financial system to further deforestation, the report said, and could designate “major deforesters" and “perpetrators of other environmental crimes such as illegal gold mining.” The White House didn’t comment.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control this week designated three Iranian security officials for actions connected with the government's "continuing crackdown on protests. The sanctions target two key officials in the city of Sanandaj, the capital of Kurdistan province: Hassan Asgari, the governor of Sanandaj, and Alireza Moradi, the commander of Law Enforcement Forces of Iran in Sanandaj. The third designee is Mohammad Taghi Osanloo, commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Ground Forces who oversees Iran’s West Azerbaijan province.
Canada this week imposed additional sanctions on the Alexander Lukashenko regime in Belarus for aiding Russia’s invasion and war in Ukraine. The new designations apply to 22 Belarusian officials, including people involved in stationing and transporting Russian military personnel and equipment. Canada also sanctioned 16 Belarusian companies involved in military manufacturing, technology, engineering, banking and railway transportation.