If introduced, it is unclear how the EU ban would affect Russia,
because top cloud providers in Europe are U.S. companies,
including Amazon, Google and Microsoft.
The European Union last week adopted a new package of sanctions
against Russia and Belarus which included an oil embargo,
restrictive measures on Russian banks and a ban on the provision
of consultancy services to Moscow.
An initial version of a press release on the sanctions package
issued by the EU Council on June 3 also referred to a ban on the
provision of cloud services, but was later amended to delete
that reference. That sanction does not appear in the legal texts
published in the official journal of the EU.
A press officer for the Council said the initial mention of the
sanction on cloud services was "a material error", and declined
to say whether it may have been caused by a debate on the matter
among EU states.
An EU official familiar with decisions on sanctions said the
measure on cloud services was never proposed by the European
Commission, but added that the EU was working on introducing the
ban in possible future rounds of sanctions despite it being
technically difficult.
In a tweet on Tuesday, the Ukrainian president's adviser
Mykhailo Podolyak said that the editing of the press release by
the EU Council had been done without offering a clear
explanation and that it suggested a possible watering down of
sanctions.
"We must increase the sanctions pressure, not decrease," he
said.
(Reporting by Francesco Guarascio @fraguarascio; Editing by Jan
Harvey)
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