The Phnom Penh Post

Taiwan trader held over link to NK coal

- Taipei

TAIWAN has detained a local businessma­n on suspicion of buying coal from North Korea in violation of United Nations sanctions, prosecutor­s said yesterday.

A Taiwanese man surnamed Chiang allegedly carr ied anthracite from North Korea on a vessel hired through mainland China last August and September, with the cargo sold in open waters off Vietnam.

Prosecutor­s also said three others were being investigat­ed on suspicion of forgery and violating laws on terrorism financing, and have been released on bail.

The case follows the disclosure last month that Pyongyang – which is subject to a wide range of sanctions over its missile and nuclear programs – obtained oil products at sea from a vessel linked to another Taiwanese businessma­n.

Taiwan banned all trading wi t h Nor t h Ko re a l a s t September.

Prosecutor­s said yesterday they had searched Chiang’s premises on Sunday and interrogat­ed eight defendants and witnesses.

In a redacted report which hid the name of the ship and its destinatio­n, the Taipei District Prosecutor­s Office said Chiang was suspected of hiring the vessel through “Chinese persons”.

He turned off the ship’s satellite signal, purchased a false certificat­e of origin and forged the navigation log, it said.

“The anthracite coal was unloaded and s ol d of f [unnamed] port in Vietnam, thus violating the UN Security Council sanctions resolution,” according to the statement.

The UN Security Council banned North Korean coal exports last August as part of attempts to dry up sources of hard currency which could fund its weapons programs.

‘Framed by China’

This month the United States slapped new sanctions on North Korean and Chinese firms and individual­s whom it said supported the Pyongyang regime, seeking to cut off goods and materials crucial to the North Korean economy.

The Taiwanese businessma­n accused in December of selling oil to North Korea, Chen Shih-hsien, has not yet been formally charged.

But a ut hor i t i e s e a r l i e r this month banned all financial dealings with him and froze his companies’ bank accounts.

Less than a week later, Chen attempted suicide – saying that he had been “framed by China” and had no idea he was doing business with North Korea.

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