Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

US blacklists Russian, Chinese companies for breaking North Korea embargo

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The US Treasury announced sanctions on Russian and Chinese companies Wednesday for violating the economic embargo on North Korea as Washington seeks to maintain pressure on Pyongyang over its nuclear programme.

The Treasury accused China-based Dalian Sun Moon Star Internatio­nal Logistics Trading Co and its Singapore-based affiliate, SINSMS Pte., of falsifying documents to facilitate shipments of alcohol and cigarettes to North Korea.

Those shipments helped fuel what the Treasury alleged was a huge “illicit” cigarette trade earning the Pyongyang regime US$1 billion a year.

It also blackliste­d Russiabase­d Profinet Pte. for violating UN sanctions by providing loading and refueling services to sanctioned North Koreanflag­ged ships at three eastern Russia ports.

Also named was Profinet director general Vasili Aleksandro­vich Kolchanov, whom the Treasury said “was personally involved” in deals with the North Koreans.

“Treasury reminds the shipping industry of the significan­t risks posed by North Korea’s shipping practices,” the Treasury said in a statement.

The Chinese trading company acknowledg­ed that it has shipped cigarettes and alcohol to North Korea but denied any wrongdoing.

“We shipped them through China customs clearance, it’s all legal, and we have all the necessary legal formalitie­s,” the director of Dalian Sun Moon Star Internatio­nal Logistics Trading, Liang Ye, told AFP by telephone.

“We can only suspend our business now,” Liang said. “The company might go bankrupt. The sanctions have a huge impact on us.”

Despite having opened direct talks with Pyongyang, Washington continues to enforce the embargo on trade with North Korea in order to put pressure on the country to end its nuclear weapons and ballistic missile program.

“Treasury will continue to implement existing sanctions on North Korea, and will take action to block and designate companies, ports, and vessels that facilitate illicit shipments and provide revenue streams to the DPRK,” Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said in the statement Wednesday. Commodity firms and banks have been diving into blockchain pilot schemes over the last two years but the new technology’s applicatio­n for most trading has likely been over-hyped, a report by Boston Consulting Group (BCG) said.

Blockchain, originally the platform behind cryptocurr­ency Bitcoin, is viewed by some as a solution to inefficien­cies, improving transparen­cy and reducing to the risk of fraud. But BCG believes its potential has been exaggerate­d.

A high-tech ledger, blockchain uses a shared database that updates in real-time and can process and settle transactio­ns in minutes without the need for third-party verificati­on.

The volume of trades through various schemes has been negligible so far and it is too early to tell how soon it might reach a critical mass.

“There are so many pilot schemes but none have become real production scale systems yet. One of the problems is that it’s not designed for physical trades. The fundamenta­l issue: how do you track a physical entity in a virtual world? It’s two worlds colliding,” Antti Belt, co-author of the BCG report, said.

Among the obstacles to scaling up the technology include reconcilin­g terminolog­ies and whether the switch to a blockchain platform is even financiall­y justifiabl­e.

“The industry is very old and everyone uses a different language. How do you define quality, shipment schedules ... a lot of reconcilia­tion is currently needed for both sides,” Belt said.

“People have spent millions, sometimes over US$ 100 million, on IT system, do they want to do it again?”

Furthermor­e, it is uncertain to what degree traders will want to adopt a technology that will erode already razor-thin profit margins.

BCG said that as the platforms take shape, it would be “bad news” for merchant traders as the price inefficien­cies and unequal disseminat­ion of informatio­n that they rely on to make profits would disappear.

“The use of blockchain solutions would significan­tly improve transparen­cy. It would also create a more efficient and liquid market, moving commodity trading away from bilateral deals struck directly between two parties to transactio­ns based on electronic platforms to match buyers and sellers,” the report said.

Co-author Steven Kok said interest in the wider adoption of blockchain technology would start where the primary driver is certifying the source of the asset, as with diamonds, rather than efficiency.

Anglo American’s De Beers said in May it had tracked 100 high-value diamonds from miner to retailer using blockchain, in the first effort of its kind to clear the supply chain of impostors and exploitati­on.

Neverthele­ss, major companies and banks have tested blockchain across commoditie­s such as in power, diamonds, food and oil. Last year, a consortium including major banks, trading firms and producers BP, Equinor and Royal Dutch Shell announced that they would develop a blockchain-based platform ready to go by the end of 2018.

Separately, commoditie­s trader Trafigura set up another platform with IBM and Natixis for the U.S. crude oil market last year. Major agricultur­e traders have also tried blockchain such as Louis Dreyfus Co with a cargo of soybeans.

“Simply put, blockchain may not be the right answer for all players,” the report concluded.

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