G-7 nations to target those continuing to increase Russian oil purchases

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Flags are pictured during the first working session of G-7 foreign ministers in Muenster, Germany, November 3, 2022.  REUTERS/Wolfgang Rattay/Pool

The G-7 finance ministers also said they agreed on the importance of trade measures in efforts to cut off Russian revenues.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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WASHINGTON - The Group of Seven nations’ finance ministers said on Oct 1 that they will take joint steps to increase pressure on Russia by targeting those who are continuing to increase their purchases of Russian oil and those that are facilitating circumvention.

The G-7 finance ministers also said they agreed on the importance of trade measures, including tariffs and import and export bans, in efforts to cut off Russian revenues due to Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine. The joint statement followed a virtual meeting of the finance ministers.

Washington has called on its allies to impose tariffs on purchasers of Russian oil, such as India and China. While US President Donald Trump has refrained from imposing additional tariffs on Chinese imports over China’s purchases of Russian oil, his administration has targeted New Delhi with extra tariffs on imports from India.

The G-7 statement on Oct 1 did not name India nor China.

“We will target those who are continuing to increase their purchase of Russian oil since the invasion of Ukraine and those that are facilitating circumvention,” the G-7 statement said.

“We will take concrete measures to significantly reduce, with the objective of phasing out, our remaining imports from Russia, including on hydrocarbon imports,” it added.

The G-7 foreign ministers also said they were “giving serious consideration” to trade measures and other restrictions on countries that are helping to finance Russia’s war efforts. No country was identified in the statement.

Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine began in February 2022. Moscow annexed Crimea in 2014.

Russia has faced heavy sanctions from Western powers, who have been considering ways to restrict financing for its war efforts. REUTERS

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