Sanctions on Russia and Belarus will include crypto — European Commission

Share This Post

The expansion of sanctions follows the commission announcing in February that it would be removing several Russian banks from the SWIFT cross-border payment network.

The European Commission has clarified that crypto assets will fall under additional sanctions targeted against Russia and Belarus in response to the military conflict in Ukraine.

In a Wednesday statement, the European Commission said member states had agreed to amend regulations with the goal of ensuring “even more effectively that Russian sanctions cannot be circumvented, including through Belarus.” The commission said crypto assets fell under the scope of “transferable securities,” adding that loans and credit provided using crypto would not be permitted as part of these restrictive financial measures.

The expansion of sanctions follows the commission announcing in February that it would be removing several Russian banks from the SWIFT cross-border payment network — measures that did not specify how to handle crypto at the time. The European Parliament Committee on Economics and Monetary Affairs is also preparing to hold a vote on a regulatory framework for crypto assets in the EU on March 14.

Both the United States and the European Union have hinted they would be looking at Russia potentially using digital currency to evade sanctions that some have described as “economic warfare.” On Wednesday, U.S. President Joe Biden signed an executive order which will require government agencies to coordinate and consolidate policy on a national framework for crypto as well as explore the potential rollout of a central bank digital currency — the order mentioned the risks of circumventing sanctions three times.

Related: Crypto offers Russia no way out from Western sanctions

In addition to action from lawmakers, private businesses from fast food chain McDonald’s to major credit card companies including Visa and Mastercard have announced they will be scaling down in Russia and Belarus or entirely stopping operations in the two countries in response to the situation with Ukraine. Crypto exchange Binance also said on Tuesday it would no longer be able to take payments from the two major credit cards issued in Russia due to the companies’ decision.

Read Entire Article
spot_img
- Advertisement -spot_img

Related Posts

Bitcoin’s Uptober Breakout In Sight: Here Are The Next Potential Critical Levels

October has historically been one of Bitcoin‘s best-performing months, triggering notable price increases over the years Considering the price of BTC this month, several crypto analysts believe

Core Scientific’s AI deal fuels $8.7 billion revenue forecast, shares rise

Bitcoin miner Core Scientific expects to generate roughly $87 billion in revenue over the next 12 years, following an expansion of its hosting agreement with CoreWeave, according to an Oct 22

A Major Improvement to Bitcoin Cash Will Smash Developer Bottlenecks

Andrei Terentiev, CTO of Bitcoincom, explains why Bitcoincom has thrown its full support behind Bitcoin Cash Improvement Proposal 2021-05 CHIP-2021-05 Gains Bitcoincom’s Support With Promise

Bitcoin Cup And Handle Cascade: Analyst Says BTC Price Could Reach $230,000 If It Follows This Structural Path

A crypto analyst has projected a significant break to the upside for Bitcoin, drawing parallels to similar breakouts in traditional assets in the tune of the Gold and the S&P500 According to a

Peter Todd slams HBO for putting his life in danger by calling him Bitcoin’s creator

Canadian cryptographer Peter Todd has entered hiding following the release of an HBO documentary that accuses him of being the elusive creator of Bitcoin, Satoshi Nakamoto, according to an Oct 22

Sky’s Rune Christensen Reveals Star Allocation Proposal—and Possibly a Return to the Old Maker Name

Rune Christensen, founder of Makerdao, has outlined a comprehensive plan for the future of the decentralized finance (defi) ecosystem, highlighting the success of the USDS stablecoin and introducing