Gulf News

US slaps sanctions on 7 companies

FALLOUT OVER NUCLEAR TRADE COULD DEAL A MAJOR BLOW TO ISLAMABAD’S APPLICATIO­N TO JOIN THE NSG

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The Department of Commerce’s Entity List does not freeze assets but requires that US and foreign companies doing business with those on the list first obtain a licence.

The United States has imposed sanctions on seven Pakistani companies over suspicion they have links to the nuclear trade, potentiall­y hurting Pakistan’s ambitions to join the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG).

Relations between the United States and Pakistan have been strained in recent years over Pakistan’s alleged support for Islamist militants waging war in Afghanista­n, something Pakistani officials deny.

The US Bureau of Industry and Security, Commerce imposed the sanctions on the Pakistani companies on March 22 by placing them on its “Entity List”.

The companies had been “determined by the US government to be acting contrary to the national security or foreign policy interests of the United States”, the bureau said in a report on a US government website. The Department of Commerce’s Entity List does not freeze assets but requires that US and foreign companies doing business with those on the list first obtain a licence.

Special licences needed

Companies placed on the Entity List will need special licences to do business in the United States.

None of the seven sanctioned Pakistani companies, which are not well known, could be immediatel­y reached for comment, nor could a Singaporeb­ased company which the bureau said was linked to one of the Pakistani companies.

Pakistani officials have in the past been accused of handing over nuclear secrets to North Korea. The government has denied the accusation­s though Pakistan has a poor record on nuclear proliferat­ion.

The Pakistani scientist lionised as the father of Pakistan’s atom bomb, Abdul Qadeer Khan, in 2004 said he had sold nuclear secrets to North Korea.

A UN nuclear watchdog said in 2008 that Khan’s network smuggled nuclear weaponisat­ion blueprints to Iran, Libya and North Korea and was active in 12 countries.

Sanctioned companies

Of the latest companies to be sanctioned, Singapore-based Mushko Logistics and Pakistan-based Mushko Electronic­s “procured items for several Pakistani entities on the Entity List”, the US bureau said in its report.

Another company, Solutions Engineerin­g, “has been involved in the procuremen­t of US-origin items on behalf of nuclear-related entities in Pakistan that are already listed on the Entity List”.

Three of the companies — Akhtar & Munir, Proficient Engineers and Pervaiz Commercial Trading Co. (PCTC) — were on the list due to “involvemen­t in the proliferat­ion of unsafeguar­ded nuclear activities that are contrary to the national security and/or foreign policy interests of the United States”.

Marine Systems was placed on the Entity list for helping other already-sanctioned bodies obtain items without a licence, while Engineerin­g and Commercial Services (ECS) was sanctioned for “involvemen­t in supplying a Pakistani nuclearrel­ated entity on the Entity List”.

The sanctions could deal a blow to Pakistan’s applicatio­n to join the NSG, a 48-nation club dedicated to curbing nuclear arms proliferat­ion by controllin­g the export and retransfer of materials that could foster nuclear weapons developmen­t.

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