The European Union instituted an asset freeze and travel ban on 11 Myanmar officials over their role in the military coup and subsequent police repression against peaceful protesters, the European Council announced in a March 22 news release. Ten of the 11 sanctioned individuals are in the top ranks of the Myanmar armed forces, including Commander-in-Chief Min Aung Hlaing and Deputy Commander-in-Chief Soe Win. The lone nonmilitary individual is chairperson of the Union Election Commission for his role in scrapping the country's 2020 election results. The EU is pairing these sanctions with a pledge to withhold financial assistance going to the Myanmar government and to continue intensive diplomatic outreach.
The United Kingdom's Department for International Trade released a business guidance to exporters of military or dual-use technology on the definitions and scope of the technology in question along with export control concerns. The March 18 publication answers a litany of questions including to whom the export controls apply, the basis of export controls on technology, the definition and scope of the relevant technology, the scope of technology transfer in question, export controls exemptions and the relevant export licenses. The guidance opened broadly, laying out the types of technology covered under the export control regime. Generally, the pertinent technology includes blueprints, plans, diagrams, models, formulae, tables, engineering designs and manuals relating to WMD, certain arms embargoes and unauthorized military exports.
The United Kingdom's Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation tweaked certain information on two entries that remain subject to an asset freeze under its Iran nuclear sanctions regime, OFSI detailed in a March 15 Financial Sanctions Notice. The entries are for Major General Qasem Soleimani and Step Standart Teknik Parca San Ve Tic A.S. The update scratched other names that both would be known by or referred to, and reformatted the listing in the sanctions regime.
The United Kingdom designated six additional individuals who are now subject to an asset freeze as part of an update to its sanctions regime on Syria for that country's repression of the civilian population, the Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation announced in a March 15 Financial Sanctions Notice. The individuals are Muhammad Bara Al-Qatirji, Faisal Al-Miqdad, Luna Al-Shibl, Malik Aliaa, Yasser Hussein Ibrahim and Zaid Salah. They hold prominent positions including in the military, the private sector business world and President Bashar al-Assad's inner circle.
Canada and the United Kingdom will look to ratify their Trade Continuity Agreement by April 1, Canadian International Trade Minister Mary Ng announced in a March 19 press release. Having established a Memorandum of Understanding in December to continue preferential tariff rates through the Brexit process, Canada and the U.K. have decided to ratify the short-term agreement and move on to future negotiations on a more ambitious free trade agreement. The TCA gives Canadian exporters continued preferential access to the U.K. market with 98% of Canadian products receiving tariff-free admission to the Kingdom. According to the corresponding press release from Britain's International Trade Secretary Liz Truss, the agreement ensures the elimination of tariffs on beef, fish, chocolate bars and soft drinks and the eventual zero tariffs on cars. The agreement will save an estimated 42 million GB pounds on tariffs, the release said.
European Union diplomats have agreed to impose new sanctions on 11 individuals and entities for their role in human rights abuses in China, Germany's DW Akademie reported. The new sanctions will include an asset freeze and a travel ban and will apply to individuals and entities from China and other countries. The measures are expected to be formally approved March 22 and will mark the EU's first sanctions against China since a 1989 arms embargo following the Tiananmen Square massacre. Two EU diplomats said that the list includes four Chinese officials and one entity accused of violating the human rights of the Uyghur Muslim minority in China's Xinjiang region, DW reported. Sanctions also will be levied against officials from Russia, Libya, South Sudan and North Korea.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen called for “reciprocity” and “proportionality” in the European Union's COVID-19 vaccine export regime, at a March 17 press conference. To incentivize greater openness in other countries' vaccine exports, von der Leyen placed a special emphasis on reciprocity, detailing how the EU is prioritizing exporting vaccines to countries that create their own vaccines. “We think this is an invitation to be open,” she said. “So that we also see exports from those countries coming back to the European Union.”
The United Kingdom launched an online registry for entities to report the steps they have taken to eradicate and prevent modern slavery from entering their supply chains, the Home Office announced in a March 11 release. The registry comes as part of a government commitment to strengthen the reporting requirements of the Modern Slavery Act 2015. Compliance with the registry is not yet mandatory, but the Home Office said that all “organizations are strongly encouraged to submit their most recently published statement on the registry to demonstrate that they have reported.” Under proposals to strengthen the Modern Slavery Act, reporting to the registry would become mandatory, the release said.
Germany announced the extension of general permits for exports in a March 17 notice, according to an unofficial translation. General Licenses No. 12 to No. 14 and General Licenses No. 16 to No. 28 are extended to March 31, 2022. General License No. 15 was already deemed valid until the same date. The update also detailed information on General License No. 28 -- Franco-German cooperation on export controls in the arms sector derived from the Franco-German Treaty of Aachen of 2019. The agreement gives privileges to de minimis arms exports. Also, in relation to arms exports from Germany to France, registration for the General Approval must be completed before use of the permit, a preliminary procedure must be made in certain cases and the General License user must request a “declaration of integration” from a French regulator. The general license provision entered into force April 1, 2020.
Disappointed with the pace of the United Kingdom government's response on forced labor issues in China's Xinjiang region, parliamentarians on the Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy Committee issued a report on the situation, including policy recommendations on how to further crack down on modern slavery in Xinjiang. The BEIS Committee, responsible for oversight of the BEIS Department, issued sweeping recommendations for the government agency for its role in upholding human rights commitments in relation to business ties with China. The March 17 report declared that the BEIS Department “has shown little sign that it is taking a proactive or meaningful lead on investigating UK business links to forced labour and other human rights abuses in China or elsewhere.”