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![]() | This article needs to be updated. The reason given is: Needs a full overhaul due to new sanctions in February 2022; the previous list was outdated already.(February 2022) |
![]() | It has been suggested that this article should be split into articles titled List of organisations sanctioned during the Russo-Ukrainian War and List of people sanctioned during the Russo-Ukrainian War. (discuss) (May 2022) |
Various sanctions against Russia and its affiliates have been imposed by major economic and political powers in response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, including the United States, the member states of the European Union (EU), and other international organizations.[1][2]
In response, Russia has imposed its own sanctions against other countries, which include a complete ban on food imports from Australia, Canada, Norway, the United States, and the European Union.
By Canada, the United Kingdom, the United States, the European Union and Australia
Prior to 2022 invasion
The European Union, United States, and Canada imposed an initial round of sanctions on 17 March 2014, and, on 11 April,[3][4][5] Albania, Iceland and Montenegro announced that they would be following suit.[6] On 28 April, the US expanded its sanctions to include 17 Russian companies,[7] with Japan,[8][9] Canada,[9][10] and Australia,[11] taking similar actions soon thereafter.
The EU also joined the 28 April sanctions[12] and, in addition, instructed the European Investment Bank and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development to suspend the signature of new financing operations in Russia.[13] The EU continued to expand the scope and duration of its sanctions over the following months,[14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21] agreeing to extend the existing sanctions on 150 individuals and 38 companies for another six months in March 2018.[22] The EU also added five individuals—Natalya Ivanovna Berzruchenko, Inna Nikolayevna Guzeyeva, Aleksandr Yurevich Petukhov, Miroslav Aleksandrovich Pogorelov, and Anastasiya Nikolayevna Karpranova—to their sanctions lists for their involvement with, and organization of, the March 2018 Russia presidential elections in Crimea and Sevastopol that May.[23]
Switzerland, although not an EU member, mirrored the Union's sanctions,[23] a historic deviation from the country's stance of semi-complete political and wartime neutrality, citing a "serious violation of the most fundamental norms of international law within the scope of its political room for manoeuver."[24]
New Zealand imposed "largely symbolic" sanctions in May 2014,[25] and in September 2014, Australia placed Russia, Crimea, and Sevastopol on the Australian autonomous sanctions list in response to the Russian threat to the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine,[26][27][28] while Japan sanctioned Russian military-related technology and five major Russian banks (VTB Bank, Sberbank, Gazprombank, Vnesheconombank, and the Russian Agricultural Bank).[29]
Since first imposing its sanctions in 2014, the US has expanded them several times, including in December 2015[30][31][32] and April 2018.[33][34][35]
As of 24 May 2018, Ukraine's sanctions list named more than 1000 individuals and more than 400 entities.[36]
After 2022 invasion
Personal sanctions
Representative | Name | ![]() |
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Title/Remarks |
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Vladimir Putin | ![]() |
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President of Russia | |
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Mikhail Mishustin | ![]() |
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Prime Minister of Russia | ||
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Sergey Lavrov | ![]() |
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Minister of Foreign Affairs of Russia | |
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Sergei Shoigu | ![]() |
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Minister of Defence of Russia | |
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Dmitry Medvedev | ![]() |
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Deputy Chairman of the Security Council of Russia, former president and former Prime Minister of Russia[95] | ||
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Alexander Lukashenko | ![]() |
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President of Belarus |
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Roman Golovchenko | ![]() |
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Prime Minister of Belarus | |
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Viktor Khrenin | ![]() |
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Minister of Defence of Belarus | |
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Sergey Abisov | ![]() |
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Minister of Internal Affairs of the Republic of Crimea | |
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Valeri Abramov | ![]() |
Linked to VAD, AO | ||||||
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Larisa Airapetyan | ![]() |
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Minister of Health of the Luhansk People's Republic | |||
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Oleg Akimov | ![]() |
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Deputy of the Luhansk Economic Union in the National Council | ||||
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Andrey Akimov | ![]() |
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Chairman of management board of Gazprombank | |||||
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Sergey Aksyonov | ![]() |
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Head of the Republic of Crimea | |
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Victor Anosov | ![]() |
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Member of insurgent group near Slovyansk | |||||
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Vladimir Potanin | ![]() |
Co-owner of Nornickel (Norilsk Nickel)[96] | ||||||
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Anna Vladimirovna Anyukhina | ![]() |
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Minister for Property and Land Relations of the Republic of Crimea | |||||
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Igor Antipov | ![]() |
Minister of Information of the Donetsk People's Republic | ||||||
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Anatoly Antonov | ![]() |
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Ambassador of Russia to the United States, Former Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs, Former Deputy Minister of Defense | |||||
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Patriarch Kirill of Moscow, secular name Vladimir Mikhailovich Gundyayev | ![]() |
Patriarch of Moscow and all Rus' and Primate of the Russian Orthodox Church | ||||||
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Vladimir Antyufeyev, also known as Vladim Shevtsov or Vladimir Shevtsov | ![]() |
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Former Chairman of the People's Council of the Donetsk People's Republic; Former head of the Ministry of State Security of unrecognized Transnistria, wanted by law enforcement agencies of Latvia and Moldova. | |
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Viacheslav Apraksimov | ![]() |
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Member of insurgent group near Slovyansk | |||||
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Serhiy Arbuzov | ![]() |
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Former Acting Prime Minister of Ukraine, Former Deputy Prime Minister of Ukraine | ||||
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Mykola Azarov | ![]() |
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