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Britain mistakenly puts Russian central bank’s address on sanctions list

Published by maria gbaf

Posted on February 23, 2022

2 min read

· Last updated: February 8, 2026

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A policeman stands guard at the main entrance of the Bank of Russia in Moscow, highlighting the security measures amidst the UK's recent sanctions on Russian banks, including Bank Rossiya.
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LONDON (Reuters) -Britain on Tuesday mistakenly assigned the address of the Russian central bank to a privately held bank with close links to Russian President Vladimir Putin that was the target of sanctions announced by Prime Minister Boris Johnson. Johnson slapped sanctions on five private banks including Bank Rossiya, which the government said was “privately owned by elite Russian billionaires with direct […]

LONDON (Reuters) -Britain on Tuesday mistakenly assigned the address of the Russian central bank to a privately held bank with close links to Russian President Vladimir Putin that was the target of sanctions announced by Prime Minister Boris Johnson.

Johnson slapped sanctions on five private banks including Bank Rossiya, which the government said was “privately owned by elite Russian billionaires with direct links to Putin”, but spared Russia’s largest state banks for now.

The government mistakenly listed Bank Rossiya’s address as “Neglinnaya, 12, Moscow, 107016, Russia” which is the address of Russia’s central bank, known in Russian as “Bank Rossiya.”

The private Bank Rossiya is based in the northern Russian city of St Petersburg. Neglinnaya Street in Moscow has been home to a Russian or Soviet central bank office for at least a century.

The British foreign office later issued an update to make “administrative corrections to two listings under the Russia sanctions regime” which gave the bank‘s correct address.

The Russian central bank in Moscow did not reply to a Reuters request for comment, but a source close to the bank said their understanding was that it was a mistake and that it had had no impact on the bank’s operations.

(Reporting by Guy Faulconbridge and Dmitry Zhdannikov in London and Andrey Ostroukh in Moscow; Editing by Mark Heinrich and Jonathan Oatis)

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