WASHINGTON - President
Obama and Secretary of State Clinton announced in May that the United States would
ease certain financial and investment sanctions on Burma in response to the historic
reforms that have taken place in that country over the past year. Today, the U.S. Government has implemented
these changes to permit the first new U.S. investment in Burma in nearly 15
years, and to broadly authorize the exportation of financial services to
Burma. The United States supports the
Burmese Government’s ongoing reform efforts, and believes that the
participation of U.S. businesses in the Burmese economy will set a model for
responsible investment and business operations as well as encourage further
change, promote economic development, and contribute to the welfare of the
Burmese people.
As these vital economic and political reform efforts move
forward, the United States will continue to support and monitor Burma’s
progress. We have and will continue to
urge the Burmese Government to continue its reform process and we expect the
Burmese Government to implement measures that increase socio-economic
development and safeguard the human rights of all its people, including
political rights and civil liberties.
The United States remains concerned about the protection of
human rights, corruption, and the role of the military in the Burmese
economy. Consequently, the policy we are
announcing today is carefully calibrated and aimed at supporting democratic
reform and reconciliation efforts while aiding in the development of an
economic and business environment that provides benefits to all Burma’s people. A key element of this policy is that we are
not authorizing new investment with the Burmese Ministry of Defense, state or
non-state armed groups (which includes the military), or entities owned by the
foregoing. Moreover, the core authorities
underlying our sanctions remain in place.
U.S. persons are still prohibited from dealing with blocked persons,
including both listed Specially Designated Nationals (SDNs) as well as any
entities 50 percent or more owned by an SDN.
The Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC)
publishes a list of SDNs available at www.treasury.gov/resource-center/sanctions/SDN-List/Pages/default.aspx.
Also today, the President issued a new Executive Order that
will allow the U.S. Government to sanction individuals or entities that
threaten the peace, security, or stability of Burma, including those who
undermine or obstruct the political reform process or the peace process with
ethnic minorities, those who are responsible for or complicit in the commission
of human rights abuses in Burma, and those who conduct certain arms trade with
North Korea. Individual or entities
engaging in such activities would be subject to Treasury action that would cut
them off from the U.S. financial system.
OFAC General
License No. 16 Authorizes the Exportation of Financial Services to Burma
- OFAC has issued General
License No. 16 (GL 16) authorizing the exportation of U.S. financial
services to Burma, subject to certain limitations. Reflecting particular human rights risks
with the provision of security services, GL 16 does not authorize, in
connection with the provision of security services, the exportation of
financial services to the Burmese Ministry of Defense, state or non-state
armed groups (which includes the military), or entities owned by the
foregoing. GL 16 also does not
authorize the exportation of financial services to any person blocked under
the Burma sanctions program. Transfers
of funds to or from an account of a financial institution that is blocked
under the Burma sanctions program are authorized, however, provided that
the account is not on the books of a U.S. financial institution.
- Because the transactions
authorized by GL 16 include activities formerly authorized by other
general licenses (such as financial transactions in support of
humanitarian, religious, and other not-for-profit activities in Burma, and
noncommercial, personal remittances to Burma), General License No. 14-C
and General License No. 15 are replaced and superseded by GL 16.
OFAC General
License No. 17 Authorizes New Investment in Burma
- The Secretary of State, pursuant
to a delegation of authority from the President, has waived the ban on new
U.S. investment in Burma set forth in the Foreign Operations, Export
Financing, and Related Programs Appropriations Act of 1997.
- Consistent with this
waiver, OFAC has issued General License No. 17 (GL 17) authorizing new
investment in Burma, subject to certain limitations and requirements. GL 17 does not authorize new investment pursuant
to an agreement, or pursuant to the exercise of rights under such an
agreement, that is entered into with the Burmese Ministry of Defense,
state or non-state armed groups (which includes the military), or entities
owned by the foregoing, or any person blocked under the Burma sanctions
program.
Reporting
Requirements on Responsible Investment in Burma
- Any U.S. person (both individuals and entities) engaging in new investment in Burma pursuant to
GL 17 whose aggregate new investment exceeds $500,000 must provide to the
State Department the information set forth in the State Department’s
“Reporting Requirements on Responsible Investment in Burma,” available at www.HumanRights.gov/BurmaResponsibleInvestment.
- These reporting
requirements will undergo public notice and comment in accordance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
The Department of State expects to issue its 60-day Federal
Register notice of proposed information collections in the coming days.
- There are several
components to these new reporting requirements, which will apply to
investors with more than $500,000 in aggregate new investment in
Burma. Investors will be required
to file reports with the State Department on an annual basis, and will
include a version that the Department will make publicly available,
consistent with relevant U.S. law. Key
information that companies will report on include information regarding
policies and procedures with respect to human rights, workers’ rights, environmental
stewardship, land acquisitions, arrangements with security service
providers, and, aggregate annual payments exceeding $10,000 to Burmese
government entities, including state-owned enterprises. The purpose of the public report is to
promote greater transparency and encourage civil society to partner with
our companies toward responsible investment. The above reporting requirements apply
to any new investment, whatever corporate form it might take.
- In addition, individuals
or entities undertaking new investment pursuant to an agreement, or
pursuant to the exercise of rights under such an agreement, that is
entered into with the Myanma Oil and Gas Enterprise (MOGE) must notify the
State Department within 60 days of their new investment.
New Executive
Order Targeting Persons Threatening the Peace, Security, or Stability of Burma
- In signing this Executive Order,
the President has provided the United States Government with additional
tools to respond to threats to the peace, security, or stability of Burma,
and to encourage further reform in Burma.
The order provides new authority to impose blocking sanctions on persons
determined by the Secretary of the Treasury, in consultation with or at
the recommendation of the Secretary of State: to have engaged in acts that directly or
indirectly threaten the peace, security, or stability of Burma, such as
actions that have the purpose or effect of undermining or obstructing the
political reform process or the peace process with ethnic minorities in
Burma; to be responsible for or complicit in, or responsible for ordering,
controlling, or otherwise directing, or to have participated in, the
commission of human rights abuses in Burma; to have, directly or
indirectly, imported, exported, reexported, sold or supplied arms or
related materiel from North Korea or the Government of North Korea to
Burma or the Government of Burma; to be a senior official of an entity
that has engaged in the foregoing acts; to have materially assisted any of
the foregoing acts, or a person whose property and interests in property
are blocked pursuant to the order; or to be owned or controlled by, or to
have acted for or on behalf of, such a person.
Designation of the
Directorate of Defense Industries
- The Directorate of Defense
Industries (DDI) carries out missile research and development at its
facilities in Burma, where North Korean experts are active. During a trip to Pyongyang in November
2008, Burmese military officials, including the head of the Directorate of
Defense Industries, signed a memorandum of understanding with the DPRK to
provide assistance to Burma to build medium range, liquid-fueled ballistic
missiles. In the past year, North
Korean ships have continued to arrive at Burma’s ports carrying goods
destined for Burma’s defense industries.
- DDI has been designated
pursuant to Executive Order ________ of July 11, 2012 (“Blocking Property
of Persons Threatening the Peace, Stability, or Security of Burma”), which
provides the authority to block the property and interests in property of
persons determined to have, directly or indirectly, imported, exported,
reexported, sold or supplied arms or related material from North Korea or
the Government of North Korea to Burma or the Government of Burma or to
have materially assisted, sponsored, or provided financial, material, or
technological support for, or goods or services to or in support of, such
acts.
Designation of
Innwa Bank
- Innwa Bank has been designated pursuant to Executive Order 13464 as an entity that is owned or controlled by Myanmar Economic Corporation, a company previously designated by OFAC pursuant to Executive Order 13464. The Myanmar Economic Corporation is a conglomerate owned by the Ministry of Defense that has extensive interests in a variety of Burmese economic sectors.
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