The United States imposed
sanctions on two Russians, one Russian company and one Slovakian company for
what Washington said were their actions to help another Russian company avoid
sanctions over the country’s malicious cyber-related activities on Tuesday.
The U.S. Treasury said the
sanctioned companies, Saint Petersburg-based Vela-Marine Ltd and Slovakia-based
Lacno S.R.O., and the two individuals helped Divetechnoservices evade
previously imposed sanctions.
In June, the United States
sanctioned Divetechnoservices, also based in Saint Petersburg, for procuring
underwater equipment and diving systems for Russian government agencies,
including Russia’s FSB intelligence agency. The Obama administration sanctioned
the FSB in December 2016, citing the Russian government’s aggressive harassment
of U.S. officials and cyber operations aimed at the 2016 U.S. presidential
election.
In a statement on the
Russian foreign ministry’s website, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei
Ryabkov called the latest sanctions groundless and promised a response from
Moscow.
Ryabkov’s criticism
extended to separate sanctions Washington imposed on Tuesday on two Russian
shipping companies that it said were involved in transferring refined petroleum
products to North Korean vessels in violation of United Nations restrictions.
The U.S. Treasury said the
two individuals targeted on Tuesday under the cyber-related sanctions
programme, Marina Igorevna Tsareva and Anton Aleksandrovich Nagibin, had both
helped Divetechnoservices attempt to circumvent U.S. sanctions.
The head of Vela-Marine
told Reuters he did not understand why his company was being designated.
Speaking by telephone, Andrei Kuklin, head of the company, said, “Unfortunately
I cannot comment. I don’t understand what the problem is.”
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