Compliance
Russia Clamps Down On Dual Citizenship, Fines For Non-Compliance - The Hard Details

From 4 August 2014, all Russian citizens will be required to provide the authorities mandatory notification about their foreign citizenship or residency status or risk criminal liability, according to a legal alert issued by Baker & McKenzie.
From 4 August 2014, all Russian citizens will be required to
provide the authorities mandatory notification about their
foreign citizenship or residency status or risk criminal
liability. A legal alert by Baker &
McKenzie, the law firm, spells out what the rules mean.
Under the law signed on 4 June by the president of the Russian
Federation, all Russian citizens regardless of age living in the
country who hold foreign citizenship, a residency permit or any
other right allowing them to permanently live outside Russia, are
required to report their residency status within 60 days of
acquisition. Citizens who already hold foreign passports or
residency permits when the law comes into force must also notify
the Russian Federal Migration Service by 2 October.
The move comes shortly after the birth of FATCA, where citizens
of the US must declare their financial accounts held
internationally to the Internal Revenue Service or face a 30 per
cent withholding tax.
The law firm said the implications for Russian citizens who fail
to notify the RFMS of foreign citizenship or residency are
potential administrative liability fines of up to RUB 1,000
(£17), or the harsher prospect of criminal liability, which
carries a fine of up to RUB 200,000 (£3,411.40), or equal to a
person’s total salary or other income for a period of up to a
year. Alternatively, punishment for criminal liability could also
come in the form of compulsory community service of up to 400
hours.
Unfortunately for Russian citizens, the legislation does not give
guidance as to when non-compliance with the reporting obligations
is subject to either administrative or criminal liability.
According to Baker and McKenzie, a possible interpretation of the
law suggests that “filing of the notification with the violation
of procedure is subject to administrative liability, while
non-filing of the notification at all is subject to criminal
liability”.
As well as this, the country is set to introduce anti-tax
avoidance measures by the end of 2014, including controlled
foreign company rules and the beneficial ownership concept.