Regulations Amending the Special Economic Measures (Russia) Regulations: SOR/2023-92
Canada Gazette, Part II, Volume 157, Number 12
Registration
SOR/2023-92 May 18, 2023
SPECIAL ECONOMIC MEASURES ACT
P.C. 2023-445 May 18, 2023
Whereas the Governor in Council is of the opinion that gross and systematic human rights violations have been committed in the Russian Federation;
Therefore, Her Excellency the Governor General in Council, on the recommendation of the Minister of Foreign Affairs, makes the annexed Regulations Amending the Special Economic Measures (Russia) Regulations under subsections 4(1)footnote a, (1.1)footnote b, (2)footnote c and (3) of the Special Economic Measures Act footnote d.
Regulations Amending the Special Economic Measures (Russia) Regulations
Amendments
1 Part 1 of Schedule 1 to the Special Economic Measures (Russia) Regulations footnote 1 is amended by adding the following in numerical order:
- 1254 Vladimir Alekseevich CHIZHOV (born on December 3, 1953)
- 1255 Anastasia Olegovna UDALTSOVA (born on September 2, 1978)
- 1256 Vladimir Mikhailovich NOVIKOV (born on June 9, 1966)
- 1257 Andrey Borisovich PARFENOV (born on April 10, 1976)
- 1258 Andrei Nikolaevich SVINTSOV (born on November 12, 1978)
2 Part 1.1 of Schedule 1 to the Regulations is amended by adding the following in numerical order:
- 66 Irina Anatolyevna AGEEVA (born on December 29, 1976)
- 67 Nikolai Yuryevich BREEV (born in 1983)
- 68 Vyacheslav Vyacheslavovich DUKHIN (born on June 30, 1980)
- 69 Larisa Pavlovna FALKOVSKAYA (born on April 6, 1970)
- 70 Olga Vladimirovna IAROSLAVSKAIA (born on May 25, 1968)
- 71 Lenara Khakimovna IVANOVA (born on December 31, 1969)
- 72 Khamzat Asurin-Basinievich KHIRAKHMATOV (born on June 15, 1976)
- 73 Irina Nikolayevna POPOVA (born on May 13, 1971)
- 74 Galina Anatolyevna PIATYKH (born on May 12, 1970)
- 75 Andrey Yurievich VOROBYOV (born on April 14, 1970)
- 76 Sergei Grigorievich SHEVCHUK (born on July 19, 1979)
- 77 Anton Vladimirovich SOLOVIEV (born on June 28, 1983)
- 78 Tatiana Nikolaevna MOSKALKOVA (born in 1955)
- 79 Inna Nikolaevna MUKHINA (born on December 20, 1976)
- 80 Tatyana Fedorovna KOVALEVA (born on September 14, 1965)
- 81 Tamara Aleksandrovna LITVINOVA (born on May 31, 1954)
- 82 Anna Vladimirovna MITYANINA (born on September 30, 1971)
- 83 Ksenia Vladimirovna MISHONOVA (born on December 14, 1972)
- 84 Natalia Gennadyevna LISTOPADOVA (born on July 13, 1979)
- 85 Sergey Sergeyevich KRAVTSOV (born on March 17, 1974)
- 86 Evgeny Viktorovich KOZEEV (born on September 2, 1988)
- 87 Elena Mikhailovna ZAITSEVA
- 88 Irina Aleksandrovna CHERKASOVA (born in 1963)
- 89 Anzhelika Vladimirovna EVDOKIMOVA (born on September 11, 1969)
- 90 Denis Evgenievich GRIBOV (born on January 23, 1980)
3 Part 3 of Schedule 1 to the Regulations is amended by adding the following in numerical order:
- 7 The Autonomous Non-Commercial Organization for the Support of Humanitarian Programs “Russian Humanitarian Mission”
- 8 Nikeya LLC
- 9 Autonomous Non-Commercial Organization text-center “Nikeya”
- 10 Ministry of Education of the Russian Federation
- 11 All-Russian Public Movement “People’s Front “For Russia”
- 12 All-Russian Public Youth Organization “All-Russian Student Rescue Corps”
- 13 Charitable Foundation for Helping People in Difficult Life Situations “Gulfstream”
- 14 The Prosecutor General’s Office of the Russian Federation
Application Before Publication
4 For the purpose of paragraph 11(2)(a) of the Statutory Instruments Act, these Regulations apply according to their terms before they are published in the Canada Gazette.
Coming into Force
5 These Regulations come into force on the day on which they are registered.
REGULATORY IMPACT ANALYSIS STATEMENT
(This statement is not part of the Regulations.)
Issues
Russia is conducting an organized operation of illegal and forcible mass deportations of minors from the Russian-occupied territories of Ukraine to Russia, including orphans and those left without parental care.
Background
Following Russia’s illegal occupation and attempted annexation of Crimea in March 2014, the Canadian government, in tandem with partners and allies, enacted sanctions through the Special Economic Measures (Russia) Regulations (the Regulations) under the Special Economic Measures Act (SEMA). These sanctions impose dealings prohibitions (an effective asset freeze) on designated individuals and entities in Russia and Ukraine supporting or enabling Russia’s violation of Ukraine’s sovereignty. Any person in Canada and Canadians outside Canada are thereby prohibited from dealing in the property of, entering into transactions with, providing services to, or otherwise making goods available to listed persons.
On February 24, 2022, Russian President Putin announced a “special military operation” as Russian forces launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine from Russian and Belarusian territory. The war has become a grinding war of attrition which sees little prospect of a quick victory for either side, and both continue to incur heavy losses. The Russian military has committed horrific atrocities against civilians, including in Izium, Bucha, Kharkiv and Mariupol. Experts, including the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) Moscow Mechanism fact-finding missions, the Independent International Commission of Inquiry on Ukraine and the United Nations (UN) Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), have concluded that Russia is committing serious human rights violations, war crimes, possible crimes against humanity, and conflict-related sexual violence. These studies have linked Russian external aggression with systematic repression and human rights abuses domestically. According to Ukraine’s State Emergency Department, 30% of Ukrainian territory (approximately the size of Austria) is mined. President Putin’s military invasion has been paired with significant malicious cyber operations and disinformation campaigns that falsely portray the West as the aggressor; and claim Ukraine is developing chemical, biological, radiological and/or nuclear weapons with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) support. The deterioration of Russia’s relations with Ukraine has paralleled the worsening of its relations with the United States and the NATO, which has led to heightened tensions.
International response
The coalition of countries supporting Ukraine includes, but is not limited to, G7 and European countries and some of Ukraine’s neighbours. This group is working to support Ukraine across a number of areas, including energy security, nuclear safety, food security, humanitarian assistance, combatting Russian disinformation, sanctions and economic measures, asset seizure and forfeiture, military assistance, accountability, recovery and reconstruction. Canada and G7 countries are engaged in intense diplomacy with the broader international community to encourage support for Ukraine and counter false Russian narratives. Key votes in multilateral forums have effectively isolated Russia, including by adopting resolutions in the UN General Assembly condemning Russian aggression against Ukraine (March 2022), deploring the humanitarian consequences of Russian aggression against Ukraine (March 2022), suspending Russian membership in the UN Human Rights Council (April 2022) and condemning Russia’s illegal annexation of Ukrainian territories (October 2022). Many developing countries have refrained from openly criticizing Russia or imposing penalties due to geopolitical considerations, commercial incentives, or simply fear of retaliation, with some also arguing the conflict is less of a priority for their regions. Russia continues to use its position as a permanent member of the UN Security Council (UNSC) to block UNSC action on its war on Ukraine and its corrosive disinformation policies.
Canada’s response
Since February 2022, Canada has committed or delivered over Can$5 billion in assistance to Ukraine. This includes military aid, cyber defence and training to Ukrainian troops in the United Kingdom (U.K.) and Poland under the aegis of Operation UNIFIER. Economic resilience support includes new loan resources, a loan guarantee, and Ukraine Sovereignty Bonds. Canada is helping Ukraine repair its energy infrastructure and has temporarily removed trade tariffs on Ukrainian imports. Canada has also committed development and humanitarian assistance, and is countering disinformation through the G7 Rapid Response Mechanism. Canada is also providing security and stabilization programming, including support for civil rights organizations and human rights defenders. Canada announced two new immigration streams for Ukrainians coming to Canada: the temporary Canada Ukraine Authorization for Emergency Travel and a special permanent residence stream for family reunification.
In coordination with its allies and partners, since 2014, Canada has imposed sanctions on more than 2 400 individuals and entities in Russia, Belarus and Ukraine who are complicit in the violation of Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity. In addition, Canada implemented targeted restrictions against Russia and Belarus in financial, trade (goods and services), energy and transport sectors. Canada is part of the Oil Price Cap Coalition, which limits the provision of maritime services to Russian crude oil and petroleum products above a price set by the coalition. These amendments to the Regulations build upon Canada’s existing sanctions by further impeding Russian dealings with Canada. Canada seeks to align its measures with its partners, including the United States (U.S.), the U.K., the European Union (EU), Australia, New Zealand, Japan and Ukraine.
Conditions for imposing and lifting sanctions
Pursuant to SEMA, the Governor in Council may impose economic and other sanctions against foreign states, entities and individuals when, among other circumstances, a person has participated in gross and systematic human rights violations in Russia.
The duration of sanctions by Canada and like-minded partners has been explicitly linked to the peaceful resolution of the conflict, and the respect for Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, within its internationally recognized borders, including Crimea, as well as Ukraine’s territorial sea. The U.S., the U.K., the EU and Australia have continued to update their sanction regimes against individuals and entities in both Ukraine and Russia.
Objective
- Impose further macroeconomic costs on Russia.
- Impose costs on those involved in human rights abuses linked to the abduction of Ukrainian children.
- Undermine Russia’s ability to conduct its military aggression against Ukraine.
- Align Canada’s measures with those taken by international partners.
Description
The amendments to the Regulations add 30 individuals and 8 entities to Schedule 1 of the Regulations, who are subject to a broad dealings ban. They are involved in the Kremlin-backed mechanism of illegal and forcible mass deportations of minors from the Russian-occupied territories of Ukraine to Russia, which includes orphans and those left without parental care. Ukrainian officials stated that 19 393 children have been illegally deported to Russia as of April 24, 2023, in violation of the Geneva Conventions and that only 361 children have been returned to Ukraine so far.
Regulatory development
Consultation
Global Affairs Canada engages regularly with relevant stakeholders, including civil society organizations, cultural communities and other like-minded governments, regarding Canada’s approach to sanctions implementation. Global Affairs Canada research also draws from analysis from pro-democracy movements inside and outside of Russia.
With respect to the amendments targeting individuals and entities, public consultation would not be appropriate, given the risk of asset flight and the urgency to impose these measures in response to the ongoing breach of international peace and security in Ukraine.
Modern treaty obligations and Indigenous engagement and consultation
An initial assessment of the geographical scope of the amendments was conducted and did not identify any modern treaty obligations, as the amendments do not take effect in a modern treaty area.
Instrument choice
Regulations are the sole method to enact sanctions in Canada. No other instrument could be considered.
Regulatory analysis
Benefits and costs
Sanctions targeting specific individuals and entities have less impact on Canadian businesses than traditional broad-based economic sanctions, and have limited impact on the citizens of the country of the listed individuals and entities. It is likely that the newly listed individuals and entities have limited linkages with Canada and, therefore, do not have business dealings that are significant to the Canadian economy.
Canadian banks and financial institutions are required to comply with sanctions. They will do so by adding the newly listed individuals and entities to their existing monitoring systems, which may result in a minor compliance cost.
The amendments could create additional costs for businesses seeking permits that would authorize them to carry out specified activities or transactions that are otherwise prohibited.
Small business lens
Likewise, the amendments could create additional costs for small businesses seeking permits that would authorize them to carry out specified activities or transactions that are otherwise prohibited. However, costs will likely be low, as it is unlikely that Canadian small businesses have or will have dealings with the newly listed individuals and entities. No significant loss of opportunities for small businesses is expected as a result of the amendments.
One-for-one rule
The permitting process for businesses meets the definition of “administrative burden” in the Red Tape Reduction Act and would need to be calculated and offset within 24 months. However, the amendments address an emergency circumstance and are therefore exempt from the requirement to offset administrative burden and regulatory titles under the one-for-one rule.
Regulatory cooperation and alignment
While the amendments are not related to a work plan or commitment under a formal regulatory cooperation forum, they align with actions taken by Canada’s allies.
Strategic environmental assessment
The amendments are unlikely to result in important environmental effects. In accordance with the Cabinet Directive on the Environmental Assessment of Policy, Plan and Program Proposals, a preliminary scan concluded that a strategic environmental assessment is not required.
Gender-based analysis plus (GBA+)
The subject of economic sanctions has previously been assessed for effects on gender and diversity. Although intended to facilitate a change in behaviour through economic pressure on individuals and entities in foreign states, sanctions under the Special Economic Measures Act can nevertheless have an unintended impact on certain vulnerable groups and individuals. Rather than affecting Russia as a whole, these targeted sanctions impact individuals believed to be engaged in activities that directly or indirectly support, provide funding for or contribute to a violation of the sovereignty or territorial integrity of Ukraine. Therefore, these sanctions are unlikely to have a significant impact on vulnerable groups as compared to traditional broad-based economic sanctions directed toward a state, and limit the collateral effects to those dependent on those targeted individuals and entities.
Rationale
The amendments seek to impose a direct economic cost on Russia and signal Canada’s strong condemnation of Russia’s human rights violations committed against Ukrainian children inside of Russia. They target individuals and entities that are working with Russia’s Presidential Commissioner for Children’s Rights, Maria Lvova-Belova, who is currently listed by Canada under Schedule 1 (number 929) and wanted by the International Criminal Court for war crimes related to her involvement in illegal child abductions from Ukraine. Abducting Ukrainian children is an integral part of Russia’s military activities in Ukraine and these amendments target and seek to degrade the ability of Russian military and civilian authorities to cooperate on these activities. Canada’s partners have also recently used their sanctions to target Russia’s child abductions (for example, the United Kingdom in June 2022, the United States in December 2022 and the European Union in March 2023), so these amendments keep Canada aligned with the efforts of its partners on this issue.
Implementation, compliance and enforcement, and service standards
The amendments come into force on the day on which they are registered.
The names of the listed individuals and entities will be available online for financial institutions to review, and will be added to the Consolidated Canadian Autonomous Sanctions List. This will help to facilitate compliance with the Regulations.
Canada’s sanctions regulations are enforced by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA). In accordance with section 8 of the SEMA, every person who knowingly contravenes or fails to comply with the Regulations is liable, upon summary conviction, to a fine of not more than $25,000 or to imprisonment for a term of not more than one year, or to both: or, upon conviction on indictment, to imprisonment for a term of not more than five years.
The CBSA has enforcement authorities under SEMA and the Customs Act, and will play a role in the enforcement of these sanctions.
Contact
Andrew Turner
Director
Eastern Europe and Eurasia Relations Division
Global Affairs Canada
125 Sussex Drive
Ottawa, Ontario
K1A 0G2
Telephone: 343‑203‑3603
Email: Andrew.Turner@international.gc.ca