The Swiss government will create a separate department for export controls and sanctions under the State Secretariat for Economic Affairs, the Swiss Federal Council announced, according to an unofficial translation. Starting Sept. 1, the previous departments of sanctions, arms control and arms control policy, export controls on industrial products and export control policy dual-use will be moved out of the bilateral economic relations area and combined in the Export Controls and Sanctions service area, it said.
The U.K.'s Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation updated information on upcoming webinars and events covering topics including how sanctions can affect business, how to apply for licenses, how licenses are assessed and how to access sanctions guidance. The next event, in October, is an introductory webinar to OFSI.
The German Foreign Office tweeted last week that it would support EU sanctions against the leaders of the July coup in Niger. The country said it recently held talks in Nigeria on how to support the Economic Community of West African States, which suspended Niger as a member following the coup. Germany said "we are in favour of EU sanctions against the leaders of the coup as a next step."
The Office of Foreign Assets Control this week expanded its Myanmar sanctions regime to cover the country’s jet fuel sector and sanctioned people and companies involved in procuring and distributing jet fuel to Myanmar’s military regime.
DOJ this week indicted two co-founders of virtual currency mixer Tornado Cash, which it said facilitated more than $1 billion in money laundering transactions for the Lazarus Group, the sanctioned North Korean cybercrime organization. The agency said Roman Storm of Auburn, Washington, and Russian national Roman Semenov knowingly conspired to violate U.S. sanctions.
The Biden administration’s road to implement regulations for its outbound investment executive order will be “incredibly complex,” particularly if agencies disagree on how narrow or broad to scope the restrictions,Thomas Feddo, a former Treasury Department official, said during a webinar this week. Lawyers on the webinar said investors are “very concerned” about the rules having a potential “chilling” effect on a broad range of investments, especially if the government fails to adequately define a range of key terms in the executive order.
A group of European countries not in the EU aligned with an Aug. 3 European Council decision adding names to its Belarus sanctions regime. The council tacked on 38 individuals and three entities to the list, subjecting them to an asset freeze and travel ban. The countries of North Macedonia, Montenegro, Albania, Ukraine, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway also imposed the decision, the council said Aug. 21.
The U.K.'s Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation on Aug. 21 amended the entries for eight people and one entity under its North Korea sanctions list. The entity is North Korea's Munitions Industry Department, and the people are political, military or business leaders in North Korea.
Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo will visit Beijing and Shanghai Aug. 27-30 to meet with senior Chinese officials and business leaders, the agency announced Aug. 22. Raimondo looks “forward to constructive discussions on issues relating to the U.S.-China commercial relationship, challenges faced by U.S. businesses, and areas for potential cooperation.” China's Ministry of Commerce, according to an unofficial translation, said Raimondo's planned visit is "at the invitation of Chinese Minister of Commerce Wang Wentao." Ahead of the trip, the U.S. Commerce Department said, Raimondo met with Chinese ambassador Xie Feng and had a "productive discussion."
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit in an Aug. 21 summary order affirmed a New York district court's dismissal of Brutus Trading's qui tam False Claims Act against Standard Chartered, which accused the financial firm of facilitating illegal banking transactions on behalf of sanctioned parties. After Brutus filed the qui tam case, in which a party with evidence of fraud against the U.S. government can file a lawsuit on behalf of the government, the U.S. then moved to toss the matter after finding that the "factual allegations were unsupported," the legal theory "was not cognizable, and the continuation of the suit would waste considerable government resources" (Brutus Trading v. Standard Chartered Bank, 2nd Cir. # 20-2578).