The Borneo Post (Sabah)

North Korea flouts sanctions – UN

Experts estimate earnings from banned commoditie­s nearly US$200 million in revenue last year

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UNITED NATIONS, United States: North Korea is flouting sanctions by exporting coal, iron, steel and other banned commoditie­s, earning nearly US$200 million in revenue last year, a UN report said Friday.

A UN panel of experts also found evidence of military cooperatio­n by North Korea to develop Syria’s chemical weapons programmes and to provide Myanmar with ballistic missiles.

North Korea “continued to export almost all the commoditie­s prohibited in the resolution­s, generating nearly US$200 million in revenue between January and September 2017,” said the report by the experts seen by AFP.

Coal shipments were delivered to China, Malaysia, South Korea, Russia and Vietnam by ships using “a combinatio­n of multiple evasion techniques, routes and deceptive tactics,” said the report.

The Security Council last year adopted a series of resolution­s to tighten and expand exports bans aimed at cutting off revenue to North Korea’s military programmes.

The United States led the push for tough economic sanctions after North Korea’s sixth nuclear test and a series of ballistic missile launches that raised fears that the US mainland could soon be within reach.

Seven ships have been barred from ports worldwide for violating UN sanctions with coal and petroleum transfers, but the experts said much more must be done to confront “these rampant illicit activities.”

The panel found that North Korea “is already flouting the most recent resolution­s by exploiting global oil supply chains, complicit foreign nationals, offshore company registries, and the internatio­nal banking system.”

Syria and Myanmar are continuing cooperatio­n with North Korea’s KOMID corporatio­n, the country’s main arms exporter, which is on a UN sanctions blacklist, the report said.

The panel uncovered more than 40 previously unreported shipments from North Korea between 2012 and 2017 to front companies for Syria’s Scientific Studies Research Council, also known as CERS, a key institute for Syria’s chemical programme.

The investigat­ions reveal “substantia­l new evidence” concerning Pyongyang’ s military cooperatio­n with Damascus, including at least three visits by North Korean technician­s to Syria in 2016.

A visit by a North Korean technical delegation in August 2016 involved the “transfer of special resistance valves and thermomete­rs known for use in chemical weapons programmes,” said the report.

A member-state that was not named told the panel that North Korean “technician­s continue to operate at chemical weapons and missile facilities at Barzei, Adra and Hama” in Syria, said the report.

Syria, however told the panel that there were no North Korean technician­s in its territory and that the only experts it was hosting from the country were involved in sports.

North Korea continued to export almost all the commoditie­s prohibited in the resolution­s, generating nearly US$200 million in revenue between January and September 2017. — Excerpt from report by UN’s panel of experts

 ??  ?? A combinatio­n of file photos, released by the US Department of the Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control show what they describe as an attempt by North Korean ship Rye Song Gang 1 to conduct a ship-to-ship transfer, possibly of oil, in an effort...
A combinatio­n of file photos, released by the US Department of the Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control show what they describe as an attempt by North Korean ship Rye Song Gang 1 to conduct a ship-to-ship transfer, possibly of oil, in an effort...

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