Skip to content
Search
Close
SHOP
  • News
  • Analysis
  • Commentary
  • Essays
  • Interviews
  • Reviews
  • Tributes
  • Media
Menu
  • News
  • Analysis
  • Commentary
  • Essays
  • Interviews
  • Reviews
  • Tributes
  • Media
  • NEWS

Sanctions Enforcement HQ Proposed in Brussels

Sanctions are a “fundamental part of the EU’s geopolitical toolbox,” Dutch Foreign Minister Wopke Hoekstra said.
  • Tamás Orbán
  • — February 22, 2023
Sanctions are a “fundamental part of the EU’s geopolitical toolbox,” Dutch Foreign Minister Wopke Hoekstra said.
  • Tamás Orbán
  • — February 22, 2023

The Netherlands has proposed a new “sanctions enforcement headquarters” to be set up in Brussels to tackle the circumvention of EU sanctions by Russia and others, Euractiv reported. 

As The European Conservative reported, the European Union has been struggling to properly enforce its sanctions on Russia. One example is Moscow’s move to transfer an entire fleet of oil tankers under UAE authority where they continued to operate uninterrupted. 

The proposed new institution would serve as a place where EU members can pool information and resources to fight similar practices of sanctions evasion effectively.

“We currently have too little capacity in the EU to analyse, coordinate, and promote new sanctions,” said Dutch Foreign Minister Wopke Hoekstra, explaining the need for his country’s initiative. “That is why I would like us to set up a sanctions headquarters in Brussels, aimed at circumvention.”

According to him, the new body would work similarly to other established watchdogs, closely monitoring a list of high-risk sectors and trade flows to detect circumvention in time. Furthermore, under the proposal, companies operating in the EU would be “obliged to include end-use clauses in their contracts so that their products don’t end up in the Russian war machine,” Hoekstra added.

“The EU must use the full strength of its collective economic strength and criminal justice systems against those who assist in sanction evasion,” Hoekstra said, “by naming, shaming, sanctioning, and prosecuting them.” The proposal is already enjoying the backing of a dozen EU member states, including some of the bloc’s largest economies, such as Germany, France, Spain, and Italy, the foreign minister noted. 

However, half the bloc’s support may not be enough to provide the new body with the ultimate objective: criminalising the violation of EU sanctions within and by members of the European Union. A draft proposal of this plan was submitted by the commission in May last year, but many members are understandably cautious about reforms pertaining to the EU’s criminal laws.

Outside the EU, nonetheless, the new sanctions enforcement body is set to have full authority, even to seize and freeze Russian assets and to directly refer the cases it uncovers to the EU’s general prosecutor.

In the foreign minister’s opinion, Europe will rely on sanctions even more in the future. “It is crystal clear that this will be a fundamental part of our future geopolitical toolbox, that we need more of this specific purpose, for this specific war,” Hoekstra said.

Tamás Orbán is a political journalist for The European Conservative, based in Brussels. Born in Transylvania, he studied history and international relations in Kolozsvár, and worked for several political research institutes in Budapest. His interests include current affairs, social movements, geopolitics, and Central European security. On Twitter, he is @TamasOrbanEC.
  • Tags: Brussels, EU, Russia, sanctions, Tamás Orbán

READ NEXT

Sweden Issues Asylum Warning on EU-Venezuela Visa Deal

Thomas O'Reilly March 25, 2023

Meloni Defends Pro-Ukrainian Stance Despite Coalition Tensions

Thomas O'Reilly March 25, 2023

Germany: Transport Strikes To Freeze Country on Monday

Tadhg Pidgeon March 25, 2023

IMPRESSUM

SUBSCRIPTION

LOG IN

PRIVACY POLICY

CONTACT

[email protected]

© The European Conservative 2023

  • Impressum
  • Privacy Policy
  • General Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

Made by DIGITALHERO

Issue 25, Winter 2023

  • News
  • Analysis
  • Commentary
  • Essays
  • Interviews
  • Reviews
  • Tributes
  • Media
Menu
  • News
  • Analysis
  • Commentary
  • Essays
  • Interviews
  • Reviews
  • Tributes
  • Media
Search

About

SHOP

JOBS & VACANCIES

Login