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Now publish Press Release on Arkania for $10

A curated selection of the most impactful crypto stories, market movements, and emerging trends shaping the industry right now. Stay informed with high-signal updates that matter, not just the noise.

Now publish Press Release on Arkania for $10

A curated selection of the most impactful crypto stories, market movements, and emerging trends shaping the industry right now. Stay informed with high-signal updates that matter, not just the noise.

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DISCLAIMER :

Content is for informational purposes only and not financial advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry risk. Do your own research before making any decisions.

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EU Moves to Ban 11 Crypto Platforms Over Russia

European Commission proposes banning transactions on 11 crypto platforms in Russia sanctions push

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Thursday, June 11, 2026

eth news vitalik

SUMMARY

The European Union has proposed banning transactions on 11 cryptocurrency platforms as part of its 21st Russia sanctions package, in a move that significantly expands the bloc's enforcement reach into the digital assets sector.

The European Union has proposed banning transactions on 11 cryptocurrency platforms as part of its 21st sanctions package targeting Russia, representing the most significant expansion of the bloc's enforcement reach into the digital assets sector since the conflict in Ukraine began.

Kaja Kallas, vice president of the European Commission and the EU's high representative for foreign affairs and security policy, outlined the measures this week, confirming that the package would target banks, weapons manufacturers, oil traders, refineries, and other entities outside the bloc in addition to the named crypto platforms.

Kallas Confirms Tighter Controls on Crypto-Asset Services

"We will also tighten our ban for crypto-asset services to certain third countries, add new designations, and ban transactions on 11 crypto platforms," Kallas stated in a post on X, signaling a sharp escalation in the EU's use of digital-asset restrictions as a geopolitical enforcement tool.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen echoed the announcement, stating that the targeted platforms had served sanctioned Russian individuals and entities or had otherwise assisted in circumventing measures the bloc imposed following Russia's military campaign in Ukraine. The Commission declined to publicly name all 11 platforms at this stage of the proposal process.

Expanding Beyond Traditional Financial Channels

The proposal reflects a broader strategic shift in how European regulators view the role of cryptocurrency in sanctions compliance. Prior rounds of EU sanctions focused heavily on restricting Russian access to the international banking system, dollar-denominated transactions, and energy revenue streams. The inclusion of crypto platforms in the 21st package indicates that Brussels has concluded the sector has become a meaningful channel for circumventing those restrictions.

The move aligns with a trend seen across Western governments, where crypto platforms have increasingly faced pressure to demonstrate they are not serving sanctioned entities. In the United States, the Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control has previously targeted crypto firms and wallet addresses linked to Russian operatives and state-backed actors.

Market and Industry Implications

The proposed ban is likely to send a strong compliance signal to crypto exchanges and service providers operating within or serving EU-based customers. Platforms that facilitate transactions with Russian counterparties may face increased scrutiny from national regulators in EU member states tasked with enforcing the measures.

The proposal must still be formally adopted through the EU's legislative process, which typically involves approval from member state representatives. Once adopted, violations of the transaction ban could expose firms and individuals to fines and criminal liability under the enforcement frameworks of individual member states.

Industry observers noted that the measure is the most sweeping action the EU has taken to incorporate cryptocurrency platforms into its sanctions enforcement architecture, and may prompt other jurisdictions to revisit the scope of their own digital-asset sanctions regimes in light of the escalating conflict.

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Content is for informational purposes only and not financial advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry risk. Do your own research before making any decisions.

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Regulation

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Negative

Thursday, June 11, 2026

EU Moves to Ban 11 Crypto Platforms Over Russia

European Commission proposes banning transactions on 11 crypto platforms in Russia sanctions push

SUMMARY

The European Union has proposed banning transactions on 11 cryptocurrency platforms as part of its 21st Russia sanctions package, in a move that significantly expands the bloc's enforcement reach into the digital assets sector.

The European Union has proposed banning transactions on 11 cryptocurrency platforms as part of its 21st sanctions package targeting Russia, representing the most significant expansion of the bloc's enforcement reach into the digital assets sector since the conflict in Ukraine began.

Kaja Kallas, vice president of the European Commission and the EU's high representative for foreign affairs and security policy, outlined the measures this week, confirming that the package would target banks, weapons manufacturers, oil traders, refineries, and other entities outside the bloc in addition to the named crypto platforms.

Kallas Confirms Tighter Controls on Crypto-Asset Services

"We will also tighten our ban for crypto-asset services to certain third countries, add new designations, and ban transactions on 11 crypto platforms," Kallas stated in a post on X, signaling a sharp escalation in the EU's use of digital-asset restrictions as a geopolitical enforcement tool.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen echoed the announcement, stating that the targeted platforms had served sanctioned Russian individuals and entities or had otherwise assisted in circumventing measures the bloc imposed following Russia's military campaign in Ukraine. The Commission declined to publicly name all 11 platforms at this stage of the proposal process.

Expanding Beyond Traditional Financial Channels

The proposal reflects a broader strategic shift in how European regulators view the role of cryptocurrency in sanctions compliance. Prior rounds of EU sanctions focused heavily on restricting Russian access to the international banking system, dollar-denominated transactions, and energy revenue streams. The inclusion of crypto platforms in the 21st package indicates that Brussels has concluded the sector has become a meaningful channel for circumventing those restrictions.

The move aligns with a trend seen across Western governments, where crypto platforms have increasingly faced pressure to demonstrate they are not serving sanctioned entities. In the United States, the Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control has previously targeted crypto firms and wallet addresses linked to Russian operatives and state-backed actors.

Market and Industry Implications

The proposed ban is likely to send a strong compliance signal to crypto exchanges and service providers operating within or serving EU-based customers. Platforms that facilitate transactions with Russian counterparties may face increased scrutiny from national regulators in EU member states tasked with enforcing the measures.

The proposal must still be formally adopted through the EU's legislative process, which typically involves approval from member state representatives. Once adopted, violations of the transaction ban could expose firms and individuals to fines and criminal liability under the enforcement frameworks of individual member states.

Industry observers noted that the measure is the most sweeping action the EU has taken to incorporate cryptocurrency platforms into its sanctions enforcement architecture, and may prompt other jurisdictions to revisit the scope of their own digital-asset sanctions regimes in light of the escalating conflict.

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