UK bank fined for breaking Russia sanctions

The bank's parent firm says it flagged the "isolated" incident to the authorities and that steps have been taken to ensure no repeat.

Pic: iStock
Image: Pic: iStock
Why you can trust Paste BN

Bank of Scotland (BoS) has been fined by a regulator for breaking sanctions related to Russia's war in Ukraine.

The Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation (OFSI) said ‌a penalty of £160,000 had been imposed over financial transactions dating back to 2023.

The body said the bank processed 24 ​payments in February that year totalling £77,383 to and from a personal ‌current account ⁠held by a UK-designated ‌person. That person was not identified.

Money latest: Criminal barrister talks about 'painfully low' salaries

Subscribe to our Money newsletter

OFSI, which oversees compliance with all sanctions levied against Russia on behalf of the UK government, said it had concluded that the ​bank breached prohibitions on dealing with, and making funds available to, a sanctioned person.

Putin: Sanctions are 'unfriendly act'

Bank of Scotland said it had flagged the issue to the UK authorities the following month.

The penalty for Bank of Scotland, which is part of Lloyds Banking Group, was cut by 50% thanks to it voluntarily disclosing the breaches a month after the payments were made.

Follow Paste BN on WhatsApp
Follow Paste BN on WhatsApp

Keep up with all the latest news from the UK and around the world by following Paste BN

Be the first to get Breaking News

Install the Paste BN app for free

A spokesperson for its parent firm responded: "Lloyds Banking Group takes its regulatory responsibilities extremely seriously.

"We acted swiftly and transparently, proactively referring this one-off, isolated matter to the Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation and working closely with them throughout.

"OFSI has recognised our prompt voluntary disclosure, resulting in the maximum possible reduction of the penalty.

"We have further strengthened our controls to ensure we continue to meet the highest standards of risk management and governance."