Postal Loopholes Aid Sanctions Evasion
An investigation by German media reveals that Russia is bypassing EU sanctions by sending banned goods through a Berlin logistics hub, taking advantage of lighter checks on international mail. Test shipments equipped with GPS trackers passed through a hall near Berlin Brandenburg Airport without inspection before moving on via Poland and Belarus to Moscow.
The operation reportedly uses shipping labels from Uzbekistan’s state postal service, even though Germany does not authorize its use domestically. Because international mail moves quickly in bulk, it faces far less scrutiny than standard exports. The system is allegedly run by Dimitri V., former managing director of RusPost GmbH, the German branch of Russia’s state postal service. Customs searched the offices in August 2024 but found no actionable evidence.
Ukraine Pushes for Stricter Enforcement
Ukraine’s presidential envoy for sanctions policy, Vladyslav Vlasiuk, said he was not surprised by the findings and criticized Europe for failing to close such loopholes. “Nobody is doing enough, if you look at the number of cases,” he told Euronews.
Vlasiuk is visiting European countries, including the Netherlands and Belgium, to advocate for tougher enforcement. He highlighted three priorities: stronger financial sanctions, stopping Western components from reaching Russia, and decisive action against Russia’s shadow fleet. He noted that Western components have appeared in many of the 50,000-plus Shahed drone attacks Russia has launched, with alternative payment methods like cryptocurrencies making sanctions easier to bypass.
Shadow Fleet Continues to Operate
Russia’s shadow fleet remains central to sanction evasion, transporting oil and commodities on old, often underinsured tankers registered under shifting or unclear flags of convenience. These flags exploit weak oversight, low fees, and minimal safety or insurance requirements.
Despite EU sanctions on over 600 ships, about 70% remain active. France recently seized the tanker Grinch in the western Mediterranean, suspecting it of sailing under a false flag. On 26 January, Germany and 13 other EU states warned that vessels in the Baltic and North Sea operating under multiple or false flags would be treated as stateless. The declaration requires ships to carry valid documents, communicate with authorities, and comply with maritime safety laws, though enforcement measures and penalties were not specified.

