The U.K. on July 4 amended its Russian sanctions guidance page on prohibitions on insurance and reinsurance services for aviation and space goods to an individual or entity connected with Russia or for use in Russia. The Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation said the "provision of insurance and reinsurance services in respect of a satellite where the only nexus with Russia is that it is orbiting over Russia, or broadcasting to Russia (and where the insurance and reinsurance services will not be provided to a person connected with Russia), would likewise not come within the scope of these prohibitions."
The Bureau of Industry and Security posted the presentation materials from panels during its annual update conference last week. The panels included update sessions on export enforcement (see 2207010010, 2207010025 and 2206300069), recently implemented export controls (see 2207010015), the foreign direct product rule (see 2206300005) and the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls’ regulations (see 2206300029).
The U.N. Security Council last week amended one entry on its sanctions list. The UNSC updated the information for Pak Chun Il, who served as the North Korean ambassador to Egypt, to say he "concluded his tour of duty" and left Egypt Nov. 15, 2016.
The U.K. added seven new entries to its Russia sanctions list while imposing new trade restrictions on Belarus in response to the continued invasion of Ukraine.
The Bureau of Industry and Security this month updated its “Don’t Let This Happen To You” guidance, which includes summaries and case examples of past export control investigations. The 65-page document also includes an overview of the BIS Office of Export Enforcement, the agency’s various authorities and a section on BIS enforcement priorities, which specifically names China, Russia, Iran and North Korea.
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The State Department published its spring 2022 regulatory agenda, including a new mention of a final rule that will expand the types of defense items and services that can be sent to Australia, the U.K. and Canada. The rule would specifically amend the International Traffic in Arms Regulations to expand certain trade under existing defense trade treaties between the countries, and would also amend the Canadian exemptions. Other changes will make “clarifying amendments and conforming updates” to Supplement No. 1 to part 126 of the ITAR, specifically to U.S. Munitions List Categories IV(i), manufacturing know-how, and Category XII, night vision entries. The agency hopes to issue the rule this month.
The European Council on June 30 requested the consent of the European Parliament to add the violation of restrictive measures to the list of "EU Crimes" laid out in the Treaty on the Functioning of the EU, the council said. The move is intended to crack down on the circumvention on the EU's many sanctions regimes, most notably Russia restrictions made following the invasion of Ukraine. With EU member states having different definitions of what constitutes a violation of the EU's sanctions regimes, the council said that greater effort is needed to harmonize sanctions enforcement.
The State Department declined to say whether the U.S. will impose financial sanctions against the Chinese companies accused by the Commerce Department last week of helping Russia evade export controls. Rep. Michael McCaul, R-Texas, last week called on the agency to impose the sanctions (see 2206300007) and go beyond Commerce’s move of adding them to the Entity List (see 2206280056).
The Office of Foreign Assets Control last week issued a reminder to industry to file annual reports on blocked property by Sept. 30. The notice applies to blocked property held as of June 30. OFAC provided filing forms and guidance on filing the reports.