European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has presented a 19th package of sanctions on Russia, urging members of the European Union to adopt new sanctions on Russia’s exports of liquefied natural gas (LNG) in an attempt to push Moscow to end its “brutal” war in Ukraine.
“Russia’s war economy is sustained by revenues from fossil fuels,” von der Leyen said on Friday. “We want to cut these revenues. So we are banning imports of Russian LNG into European markets.”
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The sanctions must be endorsed by all 27 EU member countries before they can enter into force.
“It is time to turn off the tap,” von der Leyen said, calling on members to quickly endorse the move.
“We want Russia to leave the battlefield and come to the negotiation table, and this is the way to give peace a real chance,” she added.
Russia is showing the full extent of its contempt for diplomacy and international law.
So we’re increasing the pressure.
With our 19th package of sanctions covering energy, financial services and trade restrictions ↓ https://t.co/uW7HuZp3br
— Ursula von der Leyen (@vonderleyen) September 19, 2025
EU sanctions have already targeted more than 2,500 entities, including banks, ministries, energy companies and officials.
Those being sanctioned include President Vladimir Putin, his close associates, dozens of Russian lawmakers and several oligarchs. The measures largely consist of travel bans and asset freezes.
Von der Leyen said the bloc’s existing sanctions are having an effect.
“Russia’s overheated war economy is coming to its limit,” she said, pointing to persistently high inflation in the country.
The EU has so far adopted 18 sanction packages against Moscow, though reaching agreement on new targets often takes weeks.
Russian LNG accounted for roughly 16 percent of the bloc’s total imports last year, with Europe being Russia’s largest buyer of LNG.
Hungary and Slovakia have opposed any phase-out of Russian LNG, creating potential obstacles to further action, and they have been known to use their veto power to gain concessions.
Moscow to ‘pay the price’
In a separate statement, EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said the bloc was moving up a previous pledge to end all imports of LNG before the end of 2027 by 12 months.
“Our aim is to speed up the phase-out of Russian liquefied natural gas by 1 Jan 2027,” she posted on X.
“Moscow thinks it can keep its war going. We are making sure it pays the price for it.”
Tearing children from their families and deporting them to re-education camps is beyond description.
We will not let Russia weaponize childhood itself.We are also going to make is easier to sanction individuals involved in the abduction and indoctrination of Ukrainian children.
— Kaja Kallas (@kajakallas) September 19, 2025
Kallas said the bloc was also looking to “make it easier” to sanction individuals involved in abducting Ukrainian children.
Since 2022, Russia has faced global criticism over the deportation of Ukrainian families, many of them with children.
“Tearing children from their families and deporting them to re-education camps is beyond description,” Kallas posted on social media. “We will not let Russia weaponise childhood itself.”
UK sanctions target Georgian businessmen
Meanwhile, the UK announced sanctions on Friday against two Georgian businessmen over their support for Russia’s war in Ukraine, as well as two tankers carrying Russian oil.
“The UK has announced new sanctions targeting Georgia-linked supporters of Putin’s illegal war in Ukraine,” the UK foreign ministry said in a statement.
“As Russia’s war footing weakens, the Kremlin is increasingly looking to proxies in third countries to support its war and propaganda operations, including in Georgia,” the ministry’s statement said.
Among the individuals sanctioned are Georgian media mogul and politician Levan Vasadze, whom the UK accuses of putting out pro-Russian disinformation.
Otar Partskhaladze, former prosecutor general of Georgia and someone London said had “extensive links to Russia,” was also sanctioned.
In addition, two tankers were sanctioned for carrying Russian oil to the Georgian port in Batumi in violation of Western restrictions.
“Putin’s war machine relies on an international web to spread lies and fund this network,” Minister of State Stephen Doughty said, according to the statement.
“We’re cutting off another lifeline by targeting and deterring those in Georgia who provide support for Putin’s illegal war in Ukraine.”
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2025/9/19/eu-chief-seeks-sanctions-on-russian-lng-to-pressure-moscow-over-ukraine-war?traffic_source=rss