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26 June 2026 / John Gibson
Issue: 8167 / Categories: Features , Sanctions , International , Commercial
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Ownership, control & commercial reality

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© Getty images

John Gibson considers sanctions law post-Ukraine invasion & weighs up the robust but realistic approach of the English courts

  • Covers caselaw on sanctions since President Putin’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
  • Shows the English courts have taken a commercially realistic approach while refusing attempts to circumvent the sanctions regime through artificial structures.

The Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 transformed sanctions law from a specialist regulatory discipline into a central feature of English commercial litigation. Banks, commodity traders, insurers, shipowners and professional advisers were suddenly required to determine whether counterparties, assets and transactions might expose them to criminal liability or regulatory enforcement under rapidly expanding sanctions regimes. The resulting uncertainty placed the concept of ‘ownership and control’ at the centre of international commerce. English courts have since been required to determine when a non-designated entity should nevertheless be treated as effectively sanctioned because it is owned or controlled by a designated person.

The significance of the issue lies in the extraordinary breadth of the consequences which

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MOVERS & SHAKERS

Anthony Collins—William Hallett & Lorna Scully

Anthony Collins—William Hallett & Lorna Scully

Anthony Collins hires two talented legal directors

Switalskis—five appointments

Switalskis—five appointments

Firm expands national abuse compensation team

Mathys & Squire—nine promotions

Mathys & Squire—nine promotions

IP firm announces new partners and senior promotions across UK offices

NEWS
A High Court ruling has sent a jolt through the legal profession after a newly qualified solicitor used an internal AI tool to produce court correspondence containing a fabricated legal citation
A significant data privacy ruling has clarified what counts as valid consent under UK data protection law
Executors may be overlooking billions of pounds in estate assets hidden in forgotten investments and misplaced share certificates
Britain’s booming non-surgical cosmetics market is operating in what some critics describe as a regulatory ‘Wild West’
Family contact disputes are becoming an increasingly prominent feature of Court of Protection litigation
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