FTI Consulting recently hired Thomas Andrukonis, previously director of the Bureau of Industry and Security Export Management and Compliance Division, a post on LinkedIn by Matt Bell, FTI's Export Controls and Sanctions practice leader, said.
Exports to Hong Kong remain eligible for post-departure filings in the Automated Export System despite recent changes to Hong Kong’s export control status, the National Customs Brokers & Forwarders Association of America said in a Jan. 25 email to industry. NCBFAA said it confirmed with the Census Bureau that the agency will permit the filings, which are available for certain exporters that joined the post-departure filing program before it was closed to new participants. Census recently issued guidance clarifying its reporting requirements for exports to Hong Kong (see 2012300040), despite a December Bureau of Industry and Security rule that removed Hong Kong as a separate destination under the Export Administration Regulations (see 2012220053). A Census spokesperson confirmed that Hong Kong exports will remain eligible for post-departure filings.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control on Jan. 25 issued a new general license and updated an existing frequently asked question related to trade with Yemen-based Ansarallah, a U.S.-sanctioned foreign terrorist organization (see 2101110015). General License No. 13 authorizes certain transactions with Ansarallah or its subsidiaries through 12:01 a.m. on Feb. 26. OFAC also updated FAQ 876 to mention the new general license. OFAC issued four general licenses on Jan. 19 to authorize certain transactions with Ansarallah, including trade in humanitarian goods (see 2101190016).
The European Union renewed sanctions against Tunisia until Jan. 31, 2022, and deleted four sections entries under the regime, the EU said in Jan. 25 notices. The deleted entries are for Bouthaina Bent Moncef Ben Mohamed Trabelsi, Nabil Ben Abderrazek Ben Mohamed Trabelsi, Akrem Ben Hamed Ben Taher Bouaouina and Slim Ben Tijani Ben Haj Hamda Ben Ali.
President Joe Biden recently ordered a review of all U.S. and multilateral financial and economic sanctions to see if they are hindering the COVID-19 pandemic response. The Jan. 21 executive order calls on the secretaries of the State, Treasury and Commerce departments, with input from the Department of Health and Human Services secretary and the U.S. Agency for International Development administrator, to conduct the review and provide recommendations on the state of these sanctions to the national security adviser and COVID-19 response coordinator. This sanctions-review provision is part of a broader order on reestablishing American leadership in the global pandemic response and reorienting the U.S.'s national security priorities to combat COVID-19.
The Joe Biden administration has begun a comprehensive review of U.S. trade policies involving China, including several of the restrictions imposed by the Trump administration during its final months, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said. Among those restrictions is the export controls placed on goods destined for Huawei (see 2012210044).
The Department of Defense is revising its process for identifying critical technologies that should be subject to export controls after the Government Accountability Office said its current process is too broad and lacks interagency coordination. Although the DOD is tasked with sharing a list of critical technologies with agencies that oversee export controls -- including the State, Commerce and Treasury departments -- officials at all three agencies said they sometimes don’t receive the list. None of the agencies received the list in 2019, the GAO said, even though it could have helped them better protect against trade theft and illegal exports.
The United Nations Security Council removed Iraqi nationals Zuhair Talib Abd al-Sattar al-Naqib and Amir Rashid Muhammad al-Ubaidi from its sanctions list, a Jan. 18 news release said. Both were designated in 2003.
The United Kingdom’s Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation revised a range of entries under six different sanctions regimes, according to Jan. 21 notices. OFSI amended sanctions entries listed under the regimes for South Sudan, Libya, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, counterterrorism, and the Central African Republic; and it deleted 11 entries under its North Korean sanctions regime.
Serica Energy, a United Kingdom-based energy company, said it received a renewed license from the Office of Foreign Assets Control to continue providing goods, services and support to the North Sea Rhum field, the company said Jan. 21. Serica also said it received “secondary sanctions assurance” from OFAC and will be allowed to continue providing services to Rhum beyond the Feb. 28 expiration of its current license. The new license is valid through Jan. 31, 2023. The Rhum gas field is partly owned by an Iranian oil company. OFAC declined to comment.