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In December 2022, the United Nations Security Council (the ‘UNSC’) adopted a resolution which introduced a standardised humanitarian exemption across UN regimes according to which activities necessary for humanitarian assistance and other activities that support basic human needs are exempt from sanctions in the form of asset freezes imposed by the Security Council or by its Sanctions Committees. All UN sanctions regimes except the Afghanistan regulations will now include a standardised humanitarian exception to the asset freeze provisions.

UK:

The UK adopted The Sanctions (Humanitarian Exception) (Amendment) Regulations 2023 in order to implement the UN humanitarian exemption. The explanatory memorandum for these Regulations is available here.

Note that the humanitarian exception applies to the ISIL (Da’esh) and Al-Qaida (United Nations Sanctions) (EU Exit) Regulations 2019 for a period of two years. The UN Security Council will consider renewal of the exception at that point. The exception is indefinite across the other UN sanctions regimes.

OFSI has also updated its charity guidance to reflect these changes.

EU:

The EU adopted Council Regulation (EU) 2023/331 and Council Decision (CFSP) 2023/338 which also implemented the UN humanitarian exemption in the EU.

The UN resolution along with the legislation adopted by the UK and the EU provide clarity and consistency for humanitarian providers and financial institutions through a standardised humanitarian exception to help to protect efficient and effective humanitarian aid delivery. Before these developments, there was no standardised humanitarian exception across UN sanctions regimes, and in the majority of cases, there was no exception at all.

Author

Sunny Mann is the global chair of our International Trade Practice Group. He is a partner based in the London office, and has also worked in our Firm's Washington DC, New York, Sydney and Hong Kong offices.
Sunny advises clients (including numerous FTSE 100 and Fortune 100 businesses) on compliance and investigations with respect to export controls, trade sanctions and anti-bribery rules. Sunny is ranked as a Band 1 practitioner by both Legal 500 and Chambers, and was described as "excellent, with a calm and very practical approach”. Legal 500 most recently noted that Baker McKenzie “have a great team led by Sunny Mann, who has a reputation for being a strong and fair leader with fantastic people management skills to complement his undoubted trade controls expertise”.
Sunny also chairs our Geopolitical Risks Taskforce and oversaw our Firm’s support to clients responding to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The team was at the forefront of the market, having advised around one quarter of each of the Fortune 100, FTSE 100, CAC 40 and DAX 30 communities.
Sunny is a Visiting Professor at King’s College, London (teaching sanctions on the LLM course) and was for 15 years a Visiting Professor at the College of Europe, the leading institute for post-graduate European studies, where he taught an LLM course on Corporate Compliance.
Sunny has also served as a board member and trustee at Battersea Dogs and Cats Home, one of the oldest animal shelters.

Author

Dimitris Mourkas is a Knowledge Lawyer in Baker McKenzie, London office.