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UN Security Council Consolidated Sanctions

The Security Council's set of sanctions serve as the foundation for most national sanctions lists.

The Security Council sanctions are developed by a set of committees, each dedicated to establishing individual listings within its regime. Technical explanations are available on the download page.

The UN SC web site describes the policy as follows:

The Security Council can take action to maintain or restore international peace and security under Chapter VII of the United Nations Charter. Sanctions measures, under Article 41, encompass a broad range of enforcement options that do not involve the use of armed force. Since 1966, the Security Council has established 30 sanctions regimes, in Southern Rhodesia, South Africa, the former Yugoslavia (2), Haiti, Iraq (2), Angola, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, Somalia and Eritrea, Eritrea and Ethiopia, Liberia (3), DRC, Côte d’Ivoire, Sudan, Lebanon, DPRK, Iran, Libya (2), Guinea-Bissau, CAR, Yemen, South Sudan and Mali, as well as against ISIL (Da'esh) and Al-Qaida and the Taliban.

Security Council sanctions have taken a number of different forms, in pursuit of a variety of goals. The measures have ranged from comprehensive economic and trade sanctions to more targeted measures such as arms embargoes, travel bans, and financial or commodity restrictions. The Security Council has applied sanctions to support peaceful transitions, deter non-constitutional changes, constrain terrorism, protect human rights and promote non-proliferation.

Sanctions do not operate, succeed or fail in a vacuum. The measures are most effective at maintaining or restoring international peace and security when applied as part of a comprehensive strategy encompassing peacekeeping, peacebuilding and peacemaking. Contrary to the assumption that sanctions are punitive, many regimes are designed to support governments and regions working towards peaceful transition. The Libyan and Guinea-Bissau sanctions regimes all exemplify this approach.

Today, there are 14 ongoing sanctions regimes which focus on supporting political settlement of conflicts, nuclear non-proliferation, and counter-terrorism. Each regime is administered by a sanctions committee chaired by a non-permanent member of the Security Council. There are 10 monitoring groups, teams and panels that support the work of 11 of the 14 sanctions committees.

The Council applies sanctions with ever-increasing cognisance of the rights of those targeted. In the 2005 World Summit declaration, the General Assembly called on the Security Council, with the support of the Secretary-General, to ensure that fair and clear procedures are in place for the imposition and lifting of sanctions measures. The establishment of a focal point for de-listing, and the Office of the Ombudsperson to the ISIL (Da'esh) & Al-Qaida Sanctions Committee are examples of this approach in practice.

Data overview

Entities:
Total2,544
Searchable1,235
Targets876
Entity types:
People684
Addresses359
Legal entities192
Countries:
76 countries · Show overview...
Publisher:United Nations Security Council (UNSC)

The Security Council is one of the principal organs of the United Nations, charged with ensuring international peace and security. Its powers include establishing peacekeeping operations, enacting international sanctions, and authorizing military action.

Collections:in Consolidated Sanctions · OpenSanctions Default
Information:www.un.org
Source data:scsanctions.un.org · XML
Coverage:added · frequency: daily · every 4 hours
Last processed:2024-12-21 12:01:02
Last change:

Bulk download

Downloads contain the full set of entities contained in this dataset. You can fetch a simplified tabular form, or detailed, structured data in JSON format. Updated files will be provided once a day at the same location.

File nameExport typeSize
entities.ftm.jsonFollowTheMoney entities2.28 MB
names.txtTarget names text file89.47 KB
senzing.jsonSenzing entity format873.85 KB
source.xmlSource data2.11 MB
targets.nested.jsonTargets as nested JSON2.34 MB
targets.simple.csvTargets as simplified CSV285.06 KB

Help: Using the data · model reference · delta updates · support · change log · licensing

Using the API

You can query the data in this dataset via the application programming interface (API) endpoints below. Please read the introduction for documentation and terms of service.

Use the Reconciliation API in OpenRefine:
For full-text search, use the /search endpoint:
For entity matching, use the /match endpoint:

Programs15

This dataset consolidates entities targeted by the following sanctions programs, policy regimes or sub-lists:

IDTitleIssuerTarget countries
[UN-SC2713]Al-Shabaab Sanctions UNSC
[UN-SC2127]Central African Republic SanctionsUNSC Central African Republic  
[UN-SC1533]Democratic Republic Of Congo SanctionsUNSC Congo  
[UN-SC2048]Guinea-Bissau SanctionsUNSC Guinea-Bissau  
[UN-SC2653]Haiti Sanctions UNSC Haiti  
[UN-SC1518]Iraq SanctionsUNSC Iraq  
[UN-SCISIL]ISIL & Al-Qaida SanctionsUNSC Global  
[UN-SC-1267]Islamic State In Iraq And The Levant (Da’esh), Al-Qaida And Associated IndividualsUNSC Iraq  Syria  
[UN-SC1970]Libya SanctionsUNSC Libya  
[UN-SC1718]North Korea SanctionsUNSC North Korea  
[UN-SC1636]Rafiq Hariri Killing SanctionsUNSC
[UN-SC2206]South Sudan Sanctions UNSC South Sudan  
[UN-SC1591]Sudan SanctionsUNSC Sudan  
[UN-SC1988]Taliban SanctionsUNSC Afghanistan  
[UN-SC2140]Yemen SanctionsUNSC Yemen  

Recent additions

The following targeted entities have been added to this data source most recently:

AddedNameTypeCountries
Abdel Rahman Juma BarkallaPersonSudan
Luckson ElanPersonChina · Haiti
Victor ProphanePersonHaiti
Osman Mohamed Hamid MohamedPersonSudan
Wilson JosephPersonChina · Haiti
Johnson AndrePersonHaiti · China
Renel DestinaPersonChina · Haiti
Apollinaire HakizimanaPersonRwanda · Congo - Kinshasa
Ahmad Mahmood HassanPersonTanzania · Congo - Kinshasa
Michel RukundaPersonCongo - Kinshasa
Bernard Maheshe ByamunguPersonCongo - Brazzaville · Congo - Kinshasa
Vitelhomme InnocentPersonHaiti · China
Mohamed Omar MohamedPersonSomalia
IDRISSA DJALÓPersonGuinea-Bissau
The HouthisOrganizationYemen