Business

Visa, Mastercard suspend operations in Russia

Cards issued in Moscow will no longer work outside country

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 06 Mar 2022 12:00PM

Visa, Mastercard suspend operations in Russia
In light of Visa and Mastercard suspending their operations, Russia’s Central Bank warns Russians traveling abroad to carry alternate means of payment.– Pixabay pic, March 6, 2022

NEW YORK – Card payment giants Visa and Mastercard announced yesterday that they will suspend operations in Russia, the latest major United States firms to join the business freeze-out of Moscow over its invasion of Ukraine.

“Noting the unprecedented nature of the current conflict and the uncertain economic environment”, Mastercard said it had “decided to suspend our network services in Russia”.

Visa, for its part, said that “effective immediately” it would “work with its clients and partners within Russia to cease all Visa transactions over the coming days”.

US President Joe Biden “welcomed the decision” during a phone call with his Ukrainian counterpart Volodymyr Zelenskyy, in which the two discussed US, ally and private industry actions to deter Russia from aggression, according to a White House readout.

Major corporations across a range of industries have halted business in Russia since its invasion began on February 24, including everything from US-based tech firms such as Intel and Airbnb to French luxury giants LVMH, Hermes and Chanel.

Visa and Mastercard had already announced that they were complying with US and international sanctions imposed on Russia in the wake of its attack.

“Our colleagues, our customers and our partners have been affected in ways that most of us could not imagine,” Mastercard said, stating that its cards issued by Russian banks would no longer be supported by the company’s network.

Visa similarly said that cards issued in Russia would no longer work outside the country.

Both companies said cards issued abroad would no longer work in Russia.

Russian banks downplay effects

“We are compelled to act following Russia’s unprovoked invasion of Ukraine, and the unacceptable events that we have witnessed,” Visa CEO Al Kelly said.

Russia’s major banks, including its largest lender Sberbank and the Russia Central Bank, downplayed the effects that the cards’ suspensions would have on their clients.

“All Visa and Mastercard bank cards issued by Russian banks will continue to operate normally on Russian territory until their expiration date,” the Russia Central Bank said.

Sberbank said in a statement on its official Telegram account that the cards “can be used for operations in the Russian territory – to withdraw cash, make transfers using the card number, and for payment at offline as well as at online Russian stores”.

The cards will continue to work on Russian territory, it said, because all payments in Russia are made through a national system and do not depend on foreign systems.

However, the central bank warned that Russians traveling abroad should carry alternate means of payment.

Mastercard added that it would continue to provide pay and benefits to its nearly 200 employees in Russia.

Visa’s and Mastercard’s announcements came hours after PayPal also halted its services in Russia.

Ukrainian deputy prime minister Mykhailo Fedorov tweeted a letter early yesterday from PayPal CEO Dan Schulman officially announcing the stop.

“Under the current circumstances, we are suspending PayPal services in Russia,” Schulman said in the letter.

He added that PayPal would continue to support its staff in the region and would focus on “enabling our customers and our global employee community to support” humanitarian efforts in Ukraine. – AFP, March 6, 2022

Related News

Off beat / 3mth

Russia and Malaysia to continue advancing cooperation, says ambassador

Education / 1y

Visa exemption policy sees surge in number of Chinese students to Malaysia

World / 2y

Aid for Ukraine held hostage by US politics

Our Planet / 2y

Wildlife destroyed: The overlooked ‘ecocide’ of the war in Ukraine

World / 2y

Malaysian combatants acting for Russia among mercenaries warned by Ukraine

Malaysia / 2y

Visa exemption doesn’t compromise national security, assures Anwar

Spotlight

Business

Tycoon Vincent Tan trims BCorp stake further in RM115m share sale

Malaysia

UMNO’s solo gamble in Johor: A show of strength or risky miscalculation?

By The Vibes Says

Malaysia

Nik Aziz’s grandson allegedly slapped by senator: Father ready to take case to court

Malaysia

Lorry driver jailed a day, fined for making obscene gestures, dangerous driving (video)

Malaysia

PKR leader defends MyKhas access suspension for PJ, Subang MPs, cites ‘political choices’

Opinion

Social media set to dominate Johor polls as election kingmaker

Malaysia

Man charged in Butterworth parang attack case that left victim fearing permanent disability

Malaysia

Teen mothers must return to school, says Fadhlina as education remains priority

Malaysia

Penang water tariffs to increase from July 1 after year-long deferment

You may be interested

Business

Ringgit gains as US trade policy concerns offset strong American economic data

Business

Time for banks to step up and do their part, stresses former finance minister

By Ian McIntyre

Business

Tycoon Vincent Tan trims BCorp stake further in RM115m share sale

Business

Tengku Zafrul defends DC investments, says economic value goes far beyond job creation

Business

SC tightens oversight of investment-linked trust structures, requires licensing beyond incidental activity

Business

Ringgit eases against US dollar as strong American data and Gulf tensions boost greenback

Business

Private capital set to power AI data centre boom as global tech capex forecast raised to US$5.3 trillion

Business

SpaceX targets historic US$75 billion IPO in record-breaking market debut plan