The U.K.'s Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation on Oct. 10 extended a General License allowing U.K. parties to receive payments from a sanctioned party if the contract took effect before the party's designation. The license now runs through May 21. OFSI also altered the license to change the definition of "contractual obligation" to exclude contracts using certain types of financial instruments, expand the list of excluded contracts that involve financial instruments, and create another annex that lists other types of excluded contracts.
The Bureau of Industry and Security recently renewed temporary denial orders for Russian airline Ural Airlines (see 2304110018) for one year and Russian cargo carrier Aviastar (see 2304180012) for six months after the agency said both continue to “act in blatant disregard” for U.S. export controls. BIS said Ural has continued to illegally operate aircraft on flights between Russia and Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan, and Aviastar has operated flights between China and Russia. The TDOs bar the airlines from participating in transactions with items subject to the Export Administration Regulations.
South Korean semiconductor companies Samsung and SK Hynix received assurances from the Commerce Department that they will continue to be allowed to supply certain chipmaking tools to their China-based factories, continuing authorizations they had received as part of Commerce’s Oct. 7 China-related chip export controls rule, Reuters reported Oct. 9.
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The Biden administration needs to soon update its China-related chip export controls and apply “full blocking sanctions” to Huawei and China’s Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp., top House Republicans recently said in a letter to National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan. Those measures and others will address what the lawmakers said has been a ”failure” by the administration and the Bureau of Industry and Security to properly enforce the Oct. 7 chip restrictions, which placed new license requirements on a host of chip-related exports and activities involving China.
The European Parliament said the EU "must" adopt sanctions against Azerbaijani government officials who carried out human rights abuses in Nagorno-Karabakh. In a resolution adopted Oct. 5, the parliament said Azerbaijan's attack against the region on Sept. 19 amounts to "ethnic cleansing" and warrants sanctions.
John Unsalan, president of U.S. building materials supplier Metalhouse, pleaded guilty last week in connection with violations of Russia-related sanctions. Unsalan allegedly breached sanctions against Russian oligarch Sergey Kurchenko and two of his companies by providing them with over $150 million for steel-making materials (see 2304180033). DOJ said Unsalan pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit money laundering to “promote violations” of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, which carries a maximum 20-year prison sentence, and agreed to forfeit about $160 million in proceeds he obtained from the conspiracy. The U.S. dismissed the remaining counts of the indictment against Unsalan as part of a plea deal.
The U.N. Security Council last week removed an Iraq-related entry from its sanctions list. The entry was for Walid Hamid Tawfiq al-Tikriti, an Iraqi national and governor of the Basrah province who was first sanctioned by the U.N. and the Treasury Department in 2003. He remains sanctioned by Treasury.
U.S. sanctions and export controls have so far “not been sufficient to deter” China’s Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp., China analysts James Mulvenon and Joseph McReynolds said in a report released this month on Mulvenon’s website. The report said Applied Materials, Lam Research, Tokyo Electron, KLA and other chip companies are “effectively selling a wide range of relevant tools” used for 28 nanometer use to China, but SMIC likely is using them for 7 nm production.
Huawei’s 7 nanometer chip smartphone breakthrough earlier this year (see 2309120005, 2309150020 and 2309190052) signals that although China hasn’t yet reached the “global state of the art for semiconductor manufacturing,” the “gap between the peak technological level of China and that of the rest of the world has shrunk” despite U.S. export controls, said Gregory Allen of the Center for Strategic and International Studies.