The Borneo Post

China to continue Iran trade despite new US sanctions

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BEIJING: China denounced new US sanctions targeting Iran’s oil and financial sectors as “longarm jurisdicti­on” yesterday and vowed to continue its bilateral trade with the Islamic republic.

The measures, which took effect yesterday, follow US President Donald Trump’s decision to abandon a multi-nation nuclear deal with Tehran, which he said was flawed and does not adequately constrain Iran’s destabilis­ing behaviour in the Middle East.

The sanctions aim to significan­tly cut Iran’s oil exports — which have already fallen by around one million barrels a day since May — and cut it off from internatio­nal finance.

“China opposes unilateral sanctions and long- arm jurisdicti­on,” foreign ministry spokeswoma­n Hua Chunying told a regular press briefing.

“We believe that China’s normal cooperatio­n (with Iran) within internatio­nal law is legal and legitimate, and this shall be respected.”

The US has given temporary exemptions to eight countries — including India, Japan and Turkey — to continue buying oil in a bid to avoid disrupting their economies and global markets.

Asked whether China has been granted an exemption, Hua said Beijing is conducting “normal cooperatio­n” with Teheran within the framework of internatio­nal law.

China is a signatory to the 2015 Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action — which includes Britain, France, Germany and Russia — that Trump pulled out from earlier this year.

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