Strengthening supply chains against sanctions
Thomas Murray
Global Risk Intelligence | Safeguarding clients and their communities since 1994
Third-party due diligence used to mean simply assessing the financial and operational capacity of your third parties. Basic due diligence now includes assessing the cyber threat presented by your partners and suppliers, but even that does not go far enough: You also need to know if they are connected to individuals and entities who are either under sanctions, or are likely to be.
This poses a major challenge in today’s complex, globalised economy. Even an organisation that doesn’t have a sanctioned individual or entity as a majority shareholder cannot be confident that the same is true for all its third parties. And international firms with operations in blacklisted nation-states are particularly vulnerable.
Magnitsky sanctions
The Magnitsky Act became US law at the end of 2012, and introduced the world to ‘Magnitsky sanctions ’. They are designed to combat corruption and human rights abuses, and can be applied to anyone – whether an organisation, a nation-state, or a ‘natural person’ – and their assets, anywhere in the world. Many other jurisdictions (notably Canada, the UK and the EU) now also use Magnitsky-style sanctions.
Apart from reputational damage and falling short on environmental, social and governance obligations, there are legal consequences for failing to comply with sanctions lists. In the UK, it is a crime to breach the financial sanctions regime, and ignorance of the list is no defence. The US also imposes severe penalties, from fines to lengthy prison terms.
As of November 2022, Canada, the US, the UK and the EU have used Magnitsky-style sanctions to target individuals and entities in 46 countries across five continents.
With major trading and manufacturing hubs like China and Saudia Arabia featuring on this list, sanctions should be an integral part of the third-party due diligence process. This is easier said than done, especially because those under sanctions will usually go to great lengths to conceal their financial interests. However, there are steps you can take to:
领英推荐
(a)???mitigate against the risk of engaging a sanctioned third party; and
(b)??demonstrate to stakeholders and regulators that you are actively working to avoid breaking sanctions rules.
Key TPRM considerations
How we can help
At Thomas Murray, we have 30 years’ experience of working in the world’s most complex sectors to strengthen their due diligence and TPRM. SupplierSelect is the scalable, comprehensive solution we created to meet those needs. Talk to us to find out how SupplierSelect can protect your organisation in a fast-changing risk environment.
Chief Operations Officer for Thomas Murray Network Management Ltd.
1 年A clear focus on international relations is vital in protecting all serious companies and Thomas Murray‘s constant monitoring of the global financial infrastructure incorporating cyber risk is a clear and simple way to underpin protection.