Last week saw the international turmoil around Ukraine and Crimea affect Russia’s banking system, as the bank card operations of several US-sanctioned Russian banks were blocked by Visa and Mastercard.
Seven Russian banks were involved in the suspension, reported Russia Today, citing Timur Batyrev, head of the national payment system department at the Central Bank of Russia.
Washington’s move was meant to put pressure on 20 Russian individuals seen as members of President Vladimir Putin’s inner circle. These included Yury Kovalchuk, owner of Bank Rossiya and Sobinbank, and the Rotenberg brothers, who control SMP Bank and InvestCapitalBank.
One of these banks – Bank Rossiya – was directly targeted by the US government, which characterized it as “providing material support to these individuals.”
On Sunday, however, Visa and Mastercard resumed payment transaction services for clients of InvestCapitalBank and SMP Bank. Even though their main shareholders were affected by the sanctions, the banks as such were not targeted by the US government, their spokesmen maintained, which made the decision to block their bank card transactions unlawful.
“We are glad that the two biggest international payment systems have heard our arguments and reversed their decision to block [SMP Bank transactions],” SMP CEO Dmitry Kalantyrsky said in a statement reported by Reuters.
When the blocking of Bank Rossiya’s card transactions became public, President Putin reacted by announcing his intention to open an account in the bank himself. He also ordered Russia’s Central Bank to take the sanction-hit lender’s clients under protection and provide all possible assistance to them, the Associated Press reported.
Russia’s response could go much further, however, with an amendment proposed on Friday to change the country’s payment legislation.
Supported by Vladislav Reznik, first deputy chairman of the State Duma’s Financial Markets Committee, the amendment would forbid unilateral service-provision blocking by operators of payment services – except in cases of violations of the national payment system’s rules or the Russian law.
Reznik also suggested that payment operation and clearing centers be required to locate exclusively on Russian territory, and that transmission of related payment information to other countries be banned – a clear reference to Visa and Mastercard, whose centers are located outside Russia. The two operators would either be excluded from the domestic payment scene or be forced to set up new facilities in the country.
Reznik plans to have this amendment come into force by 1 October.
“The current situation is rather nonsensical,” said Vladimir Grankin, president of leading Russian payment group Ocean Bank, in an exchange with East-West Digital News. “Russian citizens who receive their salaries through their Russian bank accounts and shop in Russian supermarkets have their bank card transactions processed by US companies in the USA or other countries.”
While Russia perceived the abnormality of this situation “long ago,” Grankin noted, “building a national payment processing system is a complicated task – though last week’s events will accelerate Russia’s moves in that direction.”
Sberbank is in the running. In 2010 the national savings bank deployed its own payment system, named PRO100, as part of Russia’s Universal Electronic Card (UEC) program. PRO100 is based on international banking standards and can be deployed on the existing infrastructure, but all payments made through it are processed through centers located in Russia.
So far the UEC program has failed to reach its originally planned dimensions. Very few Russian banks have been connected to PRO100 – but the latest political developments “could bring a significant impetus to the project,” Sberbank vice president Alexey Popov told the Russian daily Izvestia on Saturday.
“It is too early to say whether these short-lived and limited US sanctions will bolster the creation of a national payment system,” said Victor Dostov, president of the Electronic Money association, to East-West Digital News. ”But in order to be as popular and universally accepted as Visa or Mastercard, such a system will need a preferential regime. It seems very likely that the state will grant reasonable preferences to PRO100, UEC and, hopefully, to such Russian payment service providers as QIWI and Yandex.Money.”
“At the same time Visa and Mastercard will face additional requirements to continue their operations in Russia (for example, to set up their operation centers here). And they will very likely comply,” Dostov believes.
This story originally appeared on East-West Digital News.
What do you know about IT in Russia? Take our quiz!
Targetting AWS, Microsoft? British competition regulator soon to announce “behavioural” remedies for cloud sector
Move to Elon Musk rival. Former senior executive at X joins Sam Altman's venture formerly…
Bitcoin price rises towards $100,000, amid investor optimism of friendlier US regulatory landscape under Donald…
Judge Kaplan praises former FTX CTO Gary Wang for his co-operation against Sam Bankman-Fried during…
Explore the future of work with the Silicon In Focus Podcast. Discover how AI is…
Executive hits out at the DoJ's “staggering proposal” to force Google to sell off its…
View Comments
When will political leaders get it into their heads that when you impose sanctions there are consequences - which either hurt innocent people or worse have unforeseen consequences that exacerbate the situation.
Also once you impose sanctions you lose the threat to do so (obvious but true!), the target will then find a way around the problem - as here.
Couldn't agree more. Just look at Cuba!
You mean that 140 million people doesn't have national payment system? Do you know that even small Serbia with 7 million people have it own national payment system called DinaCard and you can pay by cellular phone also.