The Korea Times

UN panel asks oil traders to shore up sanctions on NK

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UNITED NATIONS (AFP) — U.N. sanctions experts are asking global commodity trading firms and oil companies to spell out what measures they are taking to prevent illegal oil shipments from reaching North Korea, the panel’s coordinato­r said Tuesday.

The U.N. Security Council in December adopted a new round of sanctions that severely restricted oil supplies vital for North Korea’s ballistic missile and nuclear programs.

“We are requesting informatio­n on what measures are being put in place by these companies to reduce the risk that products might be inadverten­tly, wittingly or unwittingl­y transferre­d to North Korea,” said Hugh Griffiths, the coordinato­r of the U.N. panel of experts on North Korea.

Griffiths told AFP that illegal oil shipments were continuing to reach North Korea, despite a series of measures ordered by the Security Council to block supplies.

In March, the U.N. sanctions committee blackliste­d 27 ships, 21 companies and a businessma­n for helping North Korea circumvent sanctions and smuggle in oil and banned commoditie­s.

Letters were sent this month to 24 “major global commodity trading companies that focus on oil, but in particular refined petroleum products in the areas that the panel is monitoring and oil producers and oil refiners in those areas,” said Griffiths.

He did not provide names of companies.

Under U.N. sanctions resolution­s, vessels that provide illegal shipments of oil to North Korea run the risk of being banned from ports worldwide.

Despite this risk, “the ship-to-ship-transfers are continuing,” Griffiths said.

The practice involves North Korean tankers that obtain clandestin­e oil cargo in internatio­nal waters from ships that often switch off their satellite tracking system to prevent any monitoring of their activities.

Griffiths said private companies could include in their contracts a provision that the vessel’s Automatic Identifier System (AIS) must be turned on at all times.

He described such a clause “as an example of best practices. We are raising awareness around that.”

Under the latest sanction resolution adopted in December, crude oil supplies to North Korea were capped at four million barrels per year and a ceiling of 500,000 barrels of refined oil products per year was set.

The U.N. move to enlist support from private companies to implement sanctions comes as President Donald Trump prepares for talks with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un in Singapore on June 12.

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