The United Nations Security Council renewed its arms embargo and sanctions against South Sudan, the UN said May 29. The measures are extended until July 1, 2021. The European Union had urged the UN to renew the embargo (see 2005040018). The U.S. renewed sanctions against the country in April (see 2004020018).
China reportedly ordered its state-controlled companies to stop buying certain U.S. agricultural products after the U.S. certified last week that Hong Kong no longer qualifies for special trade treatment. The decision also came after President Donald Trump said the U.S. will sanction Chinese officials, increase export controls on dual-use technologies, and end the special customs territory in response to Beijing’s so-called national security law (see 2005290047), which the State Department said threatens Hong Kong’s autonomy (see 2005270026).
Germany asked the European Union to impose sanctions on Russia for a 2015 cyberattack on Germany’s parliament, Germany’s Federal Foreign Office said May 28, according to an unofficial translation. Germany said it will ask the EU to invoke its “cyber sanctions regime … with respect to those responsible for the attack,” including Russian national Dmitri Badin. Germany issued an arrest warrant for Badin after alleging he worked with others to “carry out intelligence activities” against the country. Germany added that it is considering “further measures.”
Even as COVID-19 delays some advances in trade facilitation -- such as being able to use a single window to export into Canada -- the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement has good news for it, panelists said during a Dickinson Wright webinar May 28.
A North Korean bank and 28 North Korean and Chinese citizens were charged with evading U.S. sanctions, according to an indictment unsealed May 28. The scheme -- which included branches of North Korea’s state-owned Foreign Trade Bank in Thailand, Libya, Austria, Russia, Kuwait and China -- involved a series of front companies used to access the U.S. financial system. The scheme allowed the banks to process at least $2.5 billion in illegal payments through more than 250 front companies, which provided funding for North Korea’s nuclear missile programs.
The State Department announced sanctions on Amir Zukic, a former member of Bosnia and Herzegovina’s House of Representatives, according to a May 28 press release. Zukic was designated for corruption that undermined the rule of law.
The European Council extended European Union sanctions against Syria for one year, until June 1, 2021, according to a May 28 press release. The sanctions will continue to target members of the Syrian regime, their supporters, and businesspeople who aid the “suffering” of the Syrian people, European Commission Vice President Josep Borrell said in a statement. The council also removed sanctions from two people and one company that “halted their sanctionable behavior,” along with two additional deceased persons.
The U.S. will officially strip Hong Kong of its special trade treatment, which will include changes to U.S. export controls and sanctions against Chinese officials, President Donald Trump said May 29. Trump said the export controls will impact dual-use technologies and sanctions will target both Hong Kong and mainland China officials.
India lifted export restrictions on the painkiller paracetamol, the country’s Directorate General of Foreign Trade said in a May 28 notice, effective immediately. India previously lifted export restrictions on formulations made of paracetamol but kept restrictions on the paracetamol active ingredient (see 2004200021).
The Directorate of Defense Controls’ Defense Export Control and Compliance System (see 2002190025) will be unavailable from 11 p.m. EDT on May 29 through 8 a.m. EDT on June 1 for system maintenance, DDTC said in a May 28 notice. Users should save work in progress before the scheduled downtime, DDTC said.