Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Renewal of Sanctions on Yemen 2402: 26 February 2018 Unanimous Renewing sanctions against Yemen 2511: 25 February 2020 13–0–2 (abstentions: China and Russian Federation) The situation in the Middle East 2564: 25 February 2021 14–0–1 (abstentions: Russian Federation) The situation in Yemen 2624: 28 February 2022
International sanctions are political and economic decisions that are part of diplomatic efforts by countries, multilateral or regional organizations against states or organizations either to protect national security interests, or to protect international law, and defend against threats to international peace and security.
20 November 2024: S/2024/835: S/PV.9790: The situation in the Middle East, including the Palestinian question (Israel–Hamas war) United States: 18 November 2024: S/2024/826: S/PV.9786: Reports of the Secretary-General on the Sudan and South Sudan Russia: 24 April 2024: S/2024/302: S/PV.9616: Non-proliferation (see also: Outer Space Treaty ...
The Taiwan Affairs Office announced its first sanction under the new law in November 2021, and the Ministry of Commerce announced its first Unreliable Entity List designation in February 2023. As of August 2024, over 100 individuals and entities have been sanctioned by China.
International sanctions against Syria; International sanctions during the Russian invasion of Ukraine; International sanctions during the Russo-Ukrainian War; International sanctions against Iran; United Nations Security Council resolutions concerning the nuclear program of Iran; Iranian frozen assets; International sanctions against Iraq
In March 2022, in retaliation for sanctions imposed against Russia in response to their invasion of Ukraine, Russia added an additional 48 countries that had imposed sanctions against it to the unfriendly countries list. Creditors from countries on the list who sought to receive payments on debt were required to open a special bank account at a ...
North Korea continued developing nuclear weapons and producing nuclear fissile material in 2023 and evading United Nations sanctions that aim to cut off funding for Pyongyang's nuclear and ...
In a study of US sanctions from 1981 to 2000, political scientist Dursan Peksen found sanctions have been counterproductive, failing to improve human rights and instead leading to a further decrease in sanctioned countries' "respect for physical integrity rights, including freedom from disappearances, extrajudicial killings, torture, and ...