EU adopts four sets of new sanctions against Russia

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The EU's 17th package of sanctions targets Moscow's shadow fleet of oil tankers that it uses to finance its war in Ukraine.

One package of sanctions targets Moscow's shadow fleet of oil tankers that it uses to finance its war in Ukraine.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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BRUSSELS - The EU on May 20 adopted four sets of sanctions against Russia over the war in Ukraine, including a 17th package targeting Moscow’s shadow fleet, and measures related to chemical weapons, human rights and hybrid threats, the European Commission said.

The EU and its Western allies have been progressively cracking down on

Russia’s shadow fleet of tankers

and related actors, which work to circumvent the Group of Seven (G-7) nations’ price cap on Russian crude oil that has been in place since late 2022. 

The cap was designed to allow Russian oil to be sold to third countries using Western insurance services, provided the price was no more than US$60 a barrel.

However, the crackdown has started to bite, and the EU will push for a lower price cap this week during a meeting of G-7 finance ministers in Canada.

Oil and gas exports are one of Russia’s main sources of revenue to finance

its war in Ukraine.

The four new sets of measures will hit over 130 entities and individuals. As part of the 17th package, the EU will list 75 new entities including major Russian oil firm Surgutneftegaz, a shipping insurance company, and four shadow fleet management firms involved in the United Arab Emirates, Turkey and Hong Kong, said EU sources. 

EU diplomats briefly weighed imposing sanctions on the Dubai branch of Litasco, the trading arm of Russia’s No. 2 oil producer Lukoil, but it was deleted from the list owing to Hungarian opposition and a weak legal basis, EU sources said. However, they did list Litasco’s Dubai shipping arm, Eiger Shipping DMCC. 

Another 189 vessels, of which 183 are oil tankers, have been added to the list, taking the total number of listed vessels to 324. 

The EU has been in dialogue with countries that provide tanker registrations, in an effort to cut off Moscow’s use of so-called flags of convenience, referring to those registered to countries other than their actual owner. 

In the latest round, the flags used included African countries such as Sierra Leone, Gabon and Comoros, Caribbean and Pacific islands, India, Azerbaijan and the landlocked European state of San Marino, the sources added.

The package also tightens measures around the sale of dual-use items, which are products or technology that can be repurposed by Russia’s military, and lists entities that support Russia’s military industrial complex in China, Belarus and Israel. REUTERS

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