Gulf News

North Korea evading oil sanctions, UN says

KIM PRESSING AHEAD WITH NUCLEAR PROGRAMME, REPORT FINDS

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North Korea has pressed ahead with its nuclear and missile programmes and continues to evade UN sanctions through increased illegal ship-to-ship transfers of oil products at sea, a UN report said on Friday.

In a 62-page report sent to the Security Council, the UN panel of experts also listed violations of a ban on North Korean exports of coal, iron, seafood and other products that generate millions of dollars in revenue for Kim Jongun’s regime.

Pyongyang “has not stopped its nuclear and missile programmes and continued to defy Security Council resolution­s through a massive increase in illicit ship-toship transfers of petroleum products, as well as through transfers of coal at sea during 2018,” said the report.

The transfer of petroleum products to North Korean tankers at sea remains “a primary method of sanctions evasion” involving 40 vessels and 130 associated companies, it added.

The violations have rendered the latest batch of sanctions “ineffectiv­e” by flouting the cap on oil, fuel and coal imposed in a raft of UN resolution­s adopted last year, it added.

At a historic June summit with US President Donald Trump, North Korean leader Kim Jong-un signed up to a vague commitment of “denucleari­sation of the Korean Peninsula” in the hope of getting relief from UN and US sanctions.

Trump however has repeatedly warned Pyongyang that the sanctions must remain in place and could even be tightened as long as there is no progress on ending its nuclear and ballistic missile programs.

North Korea also “attempted to supply small arms and light weapons (SALW) and other military equipment via foreign intermedia­ries” to Libya, Yemen and Sudan, said the report.

Arms sales via Syria

It named Syrian arms trafficker Hussain Al Ali who offered “a range of convention­al arms, and in some cases ballistic missiles to armed groups in Yemen and Libya” that were produced in North Korea.

With Ali acting as a go-between, a “protocol of cooperatio­n” between Yemen’s Houthi rebels and North Korea was negotiated in 2016 in Damascus that provided for a “vast array of military equipment.”

The panel continues to investigat­e such military cooperatio­n that would be in violation of an arms embargo on North Korea.

North Korea continued to receive revenue from exports of banned commoditie­s, for instance deliveries of iron and steel to China, India and other countries that generated nearly $14 million from October to March. “Financial sanctions remain some of the most poorly implemente­d and actively evaded measures of the sanctions regime,” said the panel. Despite a ban on joint ventures with North Korea, the panel has uncovered more than 200 such jointlyrun firms, many of which are involved in constructi­on and other businesses in Russia.

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