US, EU extend sanctions against Russia for Ukraine action

U.S. President Barack Obama extended Executive Order 13660 on Wednesday, which outlines the sanctions against certain Russian individuals and entities over Moscow’s role in the Ukrainian crisis.

Moscow said it regrets Washington’s decision to extend the sanctions against for another year.

In addition, the European Union has also decided to extend its sanctions on 149 Russian and Ukrainian nationals that it sees as responsible for the conflict in Ukraine for a further six months. The list includes senior Russian politicians and close allies of Russia’s President Vladimir Putin.

Relations between Moscow and the West deteriorated sharply over Russia’s annexation of Crimea from Ukraine almost two years ago. The U.S., EU, and some other countries imposed several rounds of sanctions on Russia’s energy, banking, and defense industries.

Moscow responded then with a EU and U.S. food import ban. It’s not clear if Russia will respond again with any counter measures, Russians are divided over how the government should react.

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Belarus became a major exporter of banned products to Russia in 2015

Belarus became the leader of re-exporting banned products to Russia, according to the statement of the Federal Customs Service. Customs authorities initiated 256 administrative cases on re-export of banned food to Russia country. After Belarus, Lithuania and Poland follow (112 cases), then Ukraine (39 cases) and Kazakhstan (28 cases), Latvia (26 cases), followed by Finland (22 cases) and Estonia (18 cases).

In total, the Russian authorities initiated 23 criminal cases and 550 administrative. In 2015, from August 7 to December 31, the Federal Customs Service detained more than 1 000 tons of banned products in the amount of 138.7 million rubles.

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European Union prolongs Crimea sanctions

The European Union prolonged a sanctions package over Russia’s annexation of Crimea until 2016. Russia annexed Crimea in March 2014, saying the peninsula had voted overwhelming in favor of returning to its Russian homeland. 

In response, the EU imposed asset freezes and visa bans against pro-Moscow leaders and Russian figures. As the Ukraine crisis deepened, the bloc widened the sanctions list over Crimea, at the same time as imposing economic sanctions against Russia, to ban imports from and investment in the peninsula. The decision covered the sanctions agreed in June 2014 which also included bans on cruise ships using Crimean ports and restrictions on exports of telecommunications and transport equipment.

These sanctions will now run until June 2016, taking them past the economic measures targeting Russia’s banks, oil and defense sectors which the EU agreed earlier to extend for another six months to January 2016.

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EU extends economic sanctions against Russia for 6 months

The European Union has extended economic sanctions against Russian for a further six months, an EU official said. This follows the EU’s decision Friday to extend sanctions against Crimea for another year.

The decision to extend the sanctions against Russia was announced by the EU Council’s press officer for foreign affairs, Susanne Kiefer. The sanctions are being maintained until January 31, 2016 to ensure the Minsk agreement is implemented.

The European Union will review the sanctions regime against Russia in six or seven months, Italian Foreign Minister Paolo Gentiloni told reporters in Luxembourg.

Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev has ordered his chief of staff to ask President Putin for an extension of Russian counter-sanctions following the EU decision. The premier has also ordered the preparation of a decree listing all categories of products and types of transactions covered by the restrictive measures.

EU sanctions against Russia include restrictions on lending to major Russian state-owned banks, as well as defense and oil companies. In addition, Brussels imposed restrictions on the supply of weapons and military equipment to Russia as well as military technology, dual-use technologies, high-tech equipment and technologies for oil production.

The EU imposed sanctions against Russia on August 1, 2014, and tightened them in September the same year. In October, a separate decision by the EU Council loosened restrictions against European subsidiaries of Russian state banks. As a countermeasure, Russia introduced a food embargo against countries that supported the sanctions.

www.rt.com

EU set to roll over sanctions on Russia, officials say

The European Union is, in the coming weeks, looking to roll over its broad economic and targeted sanctions against Russia over the Ukraine crisis until late January, according to a number of senior officials and diplomats.

The continuation of the sanctions is part of an effort to maximize the bloc’s leverage in pushing the Kremlin to fully implement its side of the Minsk cease-fire agreement, the officials say.

In 2014, the European Union introduced sanctions against Russia because of the situation with Ukraine and limited its cooperation with Moscow. In late July, shortly after the disaster near Donetsk, when Malaysian Airlines Boeing was shot, EU sanctions were imposed on the largest state banks – Sberbank, VTB, Gazprombank, Vneshekonombank, Rosselkhozbank, so that they would have a limited access to the European capital market. There was a ban on investment in infrastructure, transport, telecommunications and energy sectors, as well as oil, gas and minerals. For these sectors it is prohibited to provide financial and insurance services. The supply of weapons, machinery, electronics and other dual-use goods, as well as high-tech equipment for oil extraction was also limited. Sanctions were also imposed on the Russian National Commercial Bank, concern Almaz-Antey, Dobrolet Airlines.

In September, the European Union introduced a second package of the sanctions. They extended the restrictions on the access to the market of EU funding for three key energy companies – Rosneft, Transneft, Gazprom Neft and three defense companies – Oboronprom, United Aircraft (OAK), Uralvagonzavod.

Preparation of documents for the extension of the sanctions is not yet complete, some issues have not even been discussed formally, say officials interviewed by WSJ. However, there is a growing confidence that the EU retain the unity, if the Minsk agreements are not be fully implemented, including the withdrawal of Russian troops and weapons from the territory of Ukraine, and regaining control over Russian Kiev-Ukrainian abroad.

In recent days, the leaders of the Russian government said that if the sanctions are prolonged or if new sanctions are introduced, Russia will take a firm stand. May 27, at the International Legal Forum in St. Petersburg, Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev said that Moscow’s decision on the food ban would be equal to the decision of the US and EU on the sanctions. If sanctions are extended, there is no reason to cancel the food ban, said Deputy Prime Minister Arkady Dvorkovich. In August 2014, as a response to US and EU sanctions, Russia banned the import of a number of products from those conutries. Medvedev said that if the EU took new sanctions against Russia, Moscow would respond the same way.

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EU Sanctions against Russia prolonged

The EU leaders have decided to maintain the economic sanctions against Russia until the end of this year, as said in a statement published last week after the meeting. The sanctions are to remain in force at least until the Minsk agreements are carried out. That won’t be before the end of this year. This outcome is a compromise between proponents and opponents of the sanctions against Russia.

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EU extends sanctions for Russia

The European ministers of Foreign Affairs have reached an agreement on extending the sanctions against Russia. There was some uncertainty on the Greek point of view beforehand, but in the end the Greek minister acceded. The government leaders still need to have their say on the agreement. Moldova, meanwhile, is negotiating with Russia about resuming the apple export. And Serbia and Russia want to work together to combat illegal export.

Various countries are interested in establishing a free trade zone with the EEU, the economic union of a number of former Soviet republics, including Russia, Kazakhstan and Belarus. Israel is also interested in such an agreement. The negotiations are still running.

At the same time, Belarusian president Lukashenko is threatening to leave the EEU if the agreements within the union aren’t honoured. According to the president, it’s unacceptable for a trade war to arise between members, referring to disagreements between Russia and Belarus on food import and export. According to Lukashenko, the union is purely economic, and that this is also Kazakhstan’s point of view. By saying this, he suggests that Putin wants to use the union for political purposes.

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