UK places sanctions on Russian 'shadow' ships and Yandex Bank


FILE PHOTO: UK Royal Marine Commandos take part in a maritime interdiction operation on the vessel SMYRTOS off the south coast of England, June 14, 2026. UK MOD Crown/LPhot Hutchins/Handout via REUTERS

LONDON, June 16 (Reuters) - Britain on Tuesday imposed sanctions on the banking ⁠arm of Russian firm Yandex, two other lenders and dozens of ‌vessels accused of exporting Russian oil and gas, and a covert military procurement network.

The package aims to step up pressure on financial and logistics networks helping the Kremlin in its war in ​Ukraine. One of Russia's largest insurers, Rosgosstrakh, was ⁠also targeted.

"These sanctions target the ⁠vessels, the money and the actors propping up Russia’s war economy, and in ⁠turn, ‌threatening European security," said Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who was attending a Group of Seven summit in France.

The measures cover more than 20 ⁠oil tankers and several liquefied natural gas vessels. Britain ​said it was the ‌first time a G7 country had sanctioned ships linked to Russia's ⁠Arctic LNG 2 ​project.

Neither the Russian Embassy in London nor Yandex immediately responded to requests for comment.

Russia's "shadow fleet" is a network of vessels registered elsewhere, many of them ageing, used to ⁠evade Western energy sanctions.

Britain has imposed sanctions on ​almost 600 such vessels, and on Sunday British commandos boarded and intercepted one of them, an oil tanker, in the Channel.

The new sanctions also target what Britain ⁠described as a clandestine network centred on a firm called Neptune seeking to acquire Western technology for Russia's defence sector.

Britain said Neptune acted as a front for Russia's GRU military intelligence agency to source goods and technology.

The package targets ​individuals identified as GRU officers as well as companies ⁠operating in Russia and abroad accused of supplying defence technology.

Separately, Britain announced £210 million ($280 ​million) of financing for Ukraine’s energy security, including ‌backing a loan for a supply of ​enriched uranium to state nuclear power firm Energoatom. ($1 = 0.7455 pounds)

(Reporting by Sam Tabahriti and Alistair Smout; editing by William James and Kevin Liffey)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Others Also Read