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Sanctions still blocking bank transfers for Canadians with no ties to Putin

More than 13 months after the invasion of Ukraine, Canadians with no ties to President Vladimir Putin or his regime remain frustrated and anxious as salaries earned abroad, retirement investments and even funeral savings sit frozen among the financial assets caught up in Canada's sanctions net.

Teacher salaries, retirement savings and 'funeral money' caught up, frozen by Canadian authorities

Ingrid Morton stands in her Gr. 11 English classroom surrounded by high school students in Almaty, Kazakhstan.
Ingrid Morton (centre) taught English at international schools abroad for years before returning to Toronto a year ago. (Submitted)

More than 13 months after the invasion of Ukraine, Canadians with no ties to President Vladimir Putin or his regime remain frustrated and anxiousas salaries earned abroad, retirement investments and even funeral savings sit frozen among the assets caught up in Canada's sanctions net.

Ingrid Morton and her husband Graham are among them. For years, theytravelledthe world on a series of contracts teaching English at international schools. Their final contract was in Almaty, Kazakhstan.

But when political unrest erupted in street protests and local authorities declared a state of emergency in early 2022followed closelyby Russia's invasion ofUkrainethey decided to leave the region before their contracts ended. They'd already had a bad experiencetrying to get out ofChina when COVID hit.Ingrid was ready to retire.

"I just sort of thought, 'Oh my God, I can't take this anymore. This is crazy,'" she said.

TheMortons now live in Toronto. Butnot all of the salary they earned teaching in Kazakhstanmade it back to Canadawith them.

Their school putits foreign teachers'salaries into accounts withSberbank Kazakhstan, a subsidiary of Sberbank Russia, which was listed among the financial institutions being sanctioned by Canada.

Last year, Sberbank Kazakhstanrestructuredto escape international sanctions. But that corporate changeover hadn't happened yet when Ingrid made what had been, up to that point, aroutine transaction for themas teachers abroada money transfer from their school's localSberbankbranchto aCIBCbranch in Canada.

Canadian teachers pose standing with six high school students in a lounge-like space in Almaty, Kazakhstan.
Transferring funds home to a Canadian bank was a routine transaction for international school teachers like Graham and Ingrid Morton, pictured here surrounded by some of the high school students they taught in Almaty, Kazakhstan. (Submitted)

Ingrid transferred the couple's money onMarch 1, 2022 one week after Canada imposedsanctions on multipleRussian banks.

"I asked the financial person at our school,'Can I still send money to Canada?' And she said yes," Ingrid said. "I went to the bank and it was total mayhem ...I said,'Can I send money out?' And they said yes."

Previous transfers to Canada had appeared in their Canadian account within a few days. This one didn't.

"I sent it in good faith that it would arrive," she said. "Sberbank said, 'Well, we've sent it. We're not responsible. It's gone.'"

Global Affairs unresponsive

Ingrid said she believes this transfer, worth about $10,000, wasfrozen by the Canadian government because of the bank it came from a bank theiremployer picked, not them.

"It's not fair," Ingrid said. "Don't they know that Kazakhstan is a separate country? I didn't send such a huge amount like a Russian oligarch's probably going to send ... It seems really stupid on their part to just lump me in with that."

Ingrid applied for a permit to release the couple's money joining a long queuethat's believed to be strainingthe capacity of Global Affairs Canada (GAC) to run due diligenceand grant exemptions. It's impossible to reach anyone at GAC by phone, she said.

"Why is it taking them about a year and I haven't even had an e-mail from a person?" she said, adding that all she and her husband receiveback areautomated messages.

"How long is the war going to go on? I mean, it could be years and my money's going to be tied up because they can't bother to take a look at individual cases."

Canadian English teacher pictured surrounded by six female Gr. 12 English students in Almaty, Kazakstan, four of whom are masked and giving thumbs up or peace signs.
Canadian Ingrid Morton (centre) was teaching English to these Grade 12 students at an international school in Almaty, Kazakhstan when Russia invaded Ukraine. Some of her salary is caught up in Canada's Russia sanctions. (Submitted)

While thedollar value of theirfrozen assets doesn't pose a significanthardship for the Mortons,Ingrid said she feels for those who are missinglargeramounts.

"There's a lot of innocent people who are suffering," she said."I wouldn't expect something like that to be happening in Canada. I would expect fair treatment."

International investors caught up

Derek Nickerson said he doesn't consider himself a wealthy person, butthe Nova Scotian retiree wassavvy enough about international investingto shoparound in other jurisdictions in search ofbetter rates of return for his retirement savings.

He and his wife opened U.S. dollar accounts atArmSwissBank, based in Armenia, in 2015. Last March, asinterest ratesshifted, they decided to transfer $35,000 US to an RBC account. He said he saw their moneyarrive in the account's records on March 17and then disappearon March 22.

He contactedRBC andlearned that the money had transitedthrougha correspondent bank in Russia Alfa Bank, which is on Canada's sanctions list.

"When I ask for a SWIFT transfer, I don't know how it's going to come," Nickersonsaid. He said he didn't learn his transfer had been routed through a sanctioned bank until it was too late.

In the yearsince, he's struggled to getinformation from RBC and both U.S. and Canadian officials. He too hasapplied for an exemptionfrom GACbut has heard little in response.

"I wonder if they're not going to do anything until the war is over," he said.

While his money isfrozen, he's not earning interest. He fears it's losing value at a higher rate because of recenthighinflation.

"That's our retirement money," he said.

'This is not blood money'

Angelina Ermakov's mother has been a Canadian citizen since 2015, after moving to Ottawa to live with her daughter's family in retirement.

Following aRussian tradition, her mothersaved enough money for her funeral about a million rubles, or $17,000 in Canadian funds in the Russian bank branch next door to where she used to live in Moscow.

Ermakov finally convinced her mother to moveher "funeral money"to her Canadian bank account last February. But thewire transfer from Alfa Bank didn't go through before the sanctions rules kicked in.

"It's all of her savings. That's her peace of mind," Ermakov said. "She asks me every day where they are."

No one in their family is associated with the Putin regime, she said, adding she wonders if her transfer was targeted because of her mother's Russian surname.

"[This is]not blood money, or money supporting the war," said Ermakov, who has lived in Canada since 1990. "We do not support the war because we already made that decision to leave Russia and to come and live in a different country."

Ermakovsaid she was able to confirm with RBC that the money's being held until and unless GAC authorizes its release. She said she'sheardnothing but "radio silence" from the government.

"It's like talking to a wall because there isn't anyone responding or dealing or even reading emails at this point. I mean, it's been a year," shesaid.

Ermakov works in the federal public service. She said she finds it hard to believe the department's too overwhelmed to process her mother's application quickly.

Russian state-run Sberbank headquarters in downtown Moscow, Russia on July 29, 2014.
The headquarters of Russian state-run Sberbank in downtown Moscow on July 29, 2014. (Ivan Sekretarev/Associated Press)

"It's clear that it's a policy," she said "It is intentional because when there is a volume of work, you hire ... you pay overtime to people, you bring more people to that team or you get another team to work on this issue ... I've seen it done before."

All three of these cases are believed to be among several hundred sitting on Foreign Affairs Minister MlanieJoly's desklanguishing among the more than $122 million in funds frozen by Canadian authorities since the invasion of Ukraine.

One personwho spoke to CBC News earlier this winterfinally got access to her family's savings last month.

The RCMP, which tracks the total amounts of frozen assets and blocked transactions under Canada's Special Economic Measures Act, told CBC News on Monday that its tally hasnot changed substantially since December.

"Canada is judicious in its approach to deploying sanctions and we are committed to their effective and coordinated use," Grantly Franklin, a media spokesperson for the department, wrote in response to specific CBC questions about the department'sbacklog in processing exemption requests.

In October, the federal government allocated an additional $76 millionto sanctions administration. "Global Affairs Canada will use its portion of this investment to expand the capacity of the sanctions policy and coordination team," Franklin said.

"Our sanctions aim to apply pressure on foreign actors, not on Canadians."