On 10 July 2025, Cyprus launched the National Sanctions
Implementation Unit, known as NSIU (in Greek: EMEK –
Εθνική
Μονάδα
Εφαρμογής
Κυρώσεων), to
strengthen its ability to apply and monitor international financial
sanctions.
In July 2025, the Cyprus Parliament passed three key legislative
acts forming the legal basis for a major reform in sanctions
enforcement. These include:
- The Law on the Establishment of the National Sanctions Implementation Unit of 2025
- The Law on the Criminalisation of the Violation of EU Restrictive Measures of 2025
- The Amendment Law on the Protection of Persons Reporting Violations of Union and National Law of 2025
These laws collectively introduced a new, stricter regime for
sanctions implementation. Central to this reform is the creation of
the National Sanctions Implementation Unit (NSIU), also known as
EMEK.
The establishment of NSIU marks a major milestone in Cyprus's
journey to enhance its sanctions regime and reinforce its standing
as a transparent financial centre. The new unit consolidates
existing bodies under a unified authority within the Ministry of
Finance and is fully aligned with EU Directive 2024/1226 (the
definition of criminal offences and penalties for the violation of
Union restrictive measures). It gains broad investigative power to
request information, conduct audits, freeze assets, and impose
administrative fines up to one hundred thousand euros.
Further reinforcing the sanctions framework is the
Criminalisation Law, which introduces harsher penalties for serious
sanctions violations—fines can reach up to forty million and
prison terms may extend to five years. NSIU's mandate includes
managing sanctions licensing applications (accepting documents in
English), issuing binding directives, and collaborating with
international enforcement networks.
International cooperation is a key part of NSIU's framework.
Cyprus agreed with the UK to receive technical advice and
intelligence sharing, and the US has provided training support to
strengthen enforcement capabilities. This enhances efforts to
disrupt illicit financial flows and ensure sanctions
effectiveness—measures that have already contributed to
freezing roughly €1.9 billion in Russian-held assets
since 2022.
More details will be provided upon the official publication of the
laws.
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