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U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Treasury Sanctions Illicit Gold Companies Funding Wagner Forces
and Wagner Group Facilitator
June 27, 2023

WASHINGTON — Today, the Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC)
sanctioned four companies and one individual connected to the violent Russian military group
PMC Wagner (Wagner Group) and its founder and owner Yevgeniy Prigozhin, previously sanctioned
by the United States, the European Union (EU), Canada, and the United Kingdom (U.K.). The
Wagner Group exploits insecurity around the world, committing atrocities and criminal acts that
threaten the safety, good governance, prosperity, and human rights of nations, as well as
exploiting their natural resources. The targeted entities in the Central African Republic (CAR),
United Arab Emirates (UAE), and Russia have engaged in illicit gold dealings to fund the Wagner
Group to sustain and expand its armed forces, including in Ukraine and Africa, while the targeted
individual has been central to activities of Wagner Group units in Mali.
“Treasury’s sanctions disrupt key actors in the Wagner Group’s financial network and international
structure,” said Under Secretary of the Treasury for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence Brian E.
Nelson. “The Wagner Group funds its brutal operations in part by exploiting natural resources in
countries like the Central African Republic and Mali. The United States will continue to target the
Wagner Group’s revenue streams to degrade its expansion and violence in Africa, Ukraine, and
anywhere else.”
Concurrently, the Departments of State, the Treasury, Labor, Commerce, and Homeland Security,
as well as the United States Agency for International Development, have issued a new advisory
focused on the gold sector across sub-Saharan Africa. This advisory highlights risks related to the
gold trade, including conflict and terror financing, money laundering activities, sanctions evasion,
human rights and labor rights abuses, and environmental degradation.

ILLICIT GOLD DEALINGS FUNDING WAGNER GLOBALLY
Midas Ressources SARLU (Midas) is a CAR-based mining company affiliated with Yevgeniy
Prigozhin (Prigozhin). Midas maintains ownership of CAR-based mining concessions and licenses

for prospecting and extracting minerals, precious and semi-precious metals, and gems. Midas
retains the preferential mining allowance to the CAR’s Ndassima gold mine, which experts assess
contains gold valued at more than one billion dollars. Moreover, Midas, in conjunction with the
Wagner Group, was responsible for denying CAR government officials the ability to inspect the
Ndassima mine. Midas, along with other Prigozhin-linked firms operating in the CAR, is key to
financing Wagner’s operations in the CAR and beyond. In 2021, the United Nations (UN) confirmed
Midas was openly working with the CAR-based rebel group Unité pour la Paix en Centrafrique
(UPC) in violation of CAR mining regulations and UN sanctions. Although registered in the CAR,
Midas is also connected to individuals involved in Prigozhin’s mining activities in Madagascar.
Diamville SAU (Diamville) is a gold and diamond purchasing company based in the CAR and
controlled by Prigozhin. Diamville is one of several Prigozhin-connected entities that is intimately
involved in the CAR mining sector. In 2022, Diamville participated in a gold selling scheme that
entailed converting CAR-origin gold into U.S. dollars. Following the imposition of U.S. sanctions on
several Russian financial institutions, participants in the scheme planned to move the proceeds by
transferring cash by hand. Additionally, Diamville shipped diamonds mined in the CAR to buyers in
the UAE and in Europe.
Industrial Resources General Trading (Industrial Resources) is a Dubai-based industrial goods
distributor that has provided financial support to Prigozhin through its business dealings with
Diamville. Industrial Resources also participated in the aforementioned gold selling scheme.
Following U.S. sanctions on various Russian financial institutions, Industrial Resources wittingly
participated in the transfer by hand of cash to Russia. Industrial Resources works with Diamville to
generate revenue and move funds for Prigozhin. For example, in early 2022, Industrial Resources
was the recipient of diamonds mined in the CAR and sold by Diamville.
Limited Liability Company DM (OOO DM) is a Russia-based firm that also participated in the
aforementioned gold selling scheme.
OFAC designated Midas, Diamville, and OOO DM pursuant to Executive Order (E.O.) 14024 for being
owned or controlled by, or for having acted or purported to act for or on behalf of, directly or
indirectly, Prigozhin, a person whose property and interests in property are blocked under
E.O.14024. Prigozhin is the Russian financier of the Internet Research Agency (IRA), the Russian
troll farm that OFAC designated pursuant to E.O. 13848 in 2018 for interfering in the 2016
presidential election. Prigozhin has been designated pursuant to E.O.s 13848, 13694, and
13661.OFAC designated Industrial Resources pursuant to E.O. 14024 for having materially assisted,
sponsored, or provided financial, material, or technological support for, or goods or services to or
in support of, Prigozhin.

WAGNER GROUP FACILITATOR IN MALI
Andrey Nikolayevich Ivanov (Ivanov), a Russian national, is an executive in the Wagner Group.
During the spring of 2023, Ivanov worked closely with Prigozhin’s entity Africa Politology and
senior Malian government officials on weapons deals, mining concerns, and other Wagner Group
activities in Mali.
OFAC designated Ivanov pursuant to E.O. 14024 for having acted or purported to act for or on
behalf of, directly or indirectly, Prigozhin.
Africa Politology develops strategies and mechanisms to induce countries that promote human
rights and good governance to withdraw their presence in Africa and is involved in a series of
Russian influence tasks in the CAR and Mali, to include discrediting the UN and carrying out
lawsuits against press outlets that report on the consequences of Wagner’s activities. The
Department of State sanctioned Africa Politology in January 2023 for acting for and on behalf of
Prigozhin.

THE WAGNER GROUP
The United States has sanctioned numerous entities and individuals globally that support the
Wagner Group’s destabilizing activity. The Wagner Group has committed widespread human rights
abuses and has appropriated natural resources across multiple countries in Africa. A proxy military
force of the Kremlin, the Wagner Group has carried out combat operations around the world,
including Russia’s brutal war in Ukraine. Wagner has also participated in a scheme to procure
weapons for its operations in Ukraine, using false end-use certificates in Mali.
On June 20, 2017, OFAC designated the Wagner Group pursuant to E.O. 13660 for being responsible
for or complicit in, or having engaged in, directly or indirectly, actions or policies that threaten the
peace, security, stability, sovereignty, or territorial integrity of Ukraine, and on November 15, 2022,
the Department of State redesignated the Wagner Group pursuant to E.O.14024 for operating or
having operated in the defense and related materiel sector of the Russian Federation economy.
The Wagner Group has also been sanctioned by Australia, Canada, Japan, the United Kingdom,
and the European Union.
On January 26, 2023, OFAC redesignated the Wagner Group pursuant to E.O. 13581, as amended by
E.O. 13863, for being a foreign person that constitutes a significant transnational criminal

organization. Wagner Group personnel have engaged in an ongoing pattern of serious criminal
activity, including mass executions, rape, child abductions, and other brutalities against innocents
in the CAR and Mali. On the same day, OFAC designated the Wagner Group pursuant to E.O. 13667
for being responsible for or complicit in, or having engaged in, the targeting of women, children, or
any civilians through the commission of acts of violence, or abduction, forced displacement, or
attacks on schools, hospitals, religious sites, or locations where civilians are seeking refuge, or
through conduct that would constitute a serious abuse or violation of human rights or a violation
of international humanitarian law in relation to the CAR.

SANCTIONS IMPLICATIONS
As a result of today’s action, all property and interests in property of the designated persons
described above that are in the United States or in the possession or control of U.S. persons are
blocked and must be reported to OFAC. In addition, any entities that are owned, directly or
indirectly, individually or in the aggregate, 50 percent or more by one or more blocked persons are
also blocked. Unless authorized by a general or specific license issued by OFAC, or exempt, OFAC’s
regulations generally prohibit all transactions by U.S. persons or within (or transiting) the United
States that involve any property or interests in property of designated or otherwise blocked
persons.
The power and integrity of OFAC sanctions derive not only from OFAC’s ability to designate and
add persons to the SDN List, but also from its willingness to remove persons from the SDN List
consistent with the law. The ultimate goal of sanctions is not to punish, but to bring about a
positive change in behavior. For information concerning the process for seeking removal from an
OFAC list, including the SDN List, please refer to OFAC’s Frequently Asked Question 897 here. For
detailed information on the process to submit a request for removal from an OFAC sanctions list,
please click here.
Click here for more information on the individual and entities designated today.

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