72 Russian rights abusers face EU asset freezes and travel bans for another year

The framework was established in March 2024 after Navalny’s death, in response to Russia’s accelerating and systematic repression. EU citizens and companies are barred from funding the sanctioned.
72 russian rights abusers face eu asset freezes travel bans another year · post europa building seat council brussels samynandpartners / extended its russia human sanctions until 28 2027 said
The Europa building, seat of the Council of the EU, in Brussels. Illustrative photo: Samynandpartners / Wikimedia Commons
72 Russian rights abusers face EU asset freezes and travel bans for another year

The Council of the EU extended its Russia human rights sanctions until 28 May 2027, the Council said. The framework targets those responsible for serious human rights violations and abuses, repression of civil society and democratic opposition, and undermining democracy and the rule of law in Russia. It currently lists 72 individuals and one entity.

The EU expanded its human rights sanctions on Russia alongside its broader war-related sanctions, most recently renewed in December. A separate EU framework targeting Russia's hybrid operations against European democracy was renewed in October. Each regime can be extended or expanded independently.

What the sanctions cover

Listed individuals face EU asset freezes and travel bans, which prevent them from entering or transiting through EU territory. EU citizens and companies cannot send funds to them. The framework lets the Council expand the list to include supporters and others involved in the misconduct.

The framework also bars exports to Russia of equipment that could be used for internal repression. The export ban also covers equipment that might be used for monitoring or intercepting telecommunications.

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Framework born from Navalny's death

The EU established the framework in March 2024 in response to Russia's "accelerating and systematic repression." The decision followed the death of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny in a Russian penal colony in February 2024. Navalny was Russia's most prominent opposition figure, jailed since 2021 on charges his allies called fabricated. 

The EU treated his death as a turning point. It expressed outrage in a 19 February 2024 statement and called for an international investigation.

Brussels said it remains firmly opposed to Russia's human rights violations and repression. The Council cited Russia's war of aggression against Ukraine as deepening its concern over deteriorating human rights inside Russia.

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