Chattanooga Times Free Press

U.S. blacklists more NKorea business interests

- BY MATTHEW PENNINGTON

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion slapped sanctions Wednesday on North Korean financial and business networks in China and Russia as it pushed to cut off revenues for the increasing­ly isolated nation’s nuclear and missile programs.

The Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control also targeted five North Korean shipping companies and six of its vessels. That’s part of an intensifie­d effort by Washington to interdict ships that help the North evade sanctions.

The sanctions have been tightened significan­tly in the past year as Kim Jong Un’s government accelerate­s toward perfecting a nuclear weapon that can threaten the U.S. mainland. While Beijing and Moscow have supported U.N. restrictio­ns, they bristle at Washington imposing unilateral sanctions to bolster the pressure campaign.

The intensific­ation of the U.S.led campaign is a counterpoi­nt to a thaw in relations between North and South Korea revolving around the North’s participat­ion in next month’s Winter Olympics being hosted by the South. That has eased tensions on the divided peninsula, but the North shows no sign it’s willing to negotiate over its nuclear program.

“The U.S. government is targeting illicit actors in China, Russia, and elsewhere who are working on behalf of North Korean financial networks, and calling for their expulsion from the territorie­s where they reside,” Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin said in a statement. Americans are barred from dealing with those who are designated.

Among those blackliste­d were 10 representa­tives in China and Russia of the Korea Ryonbong General Corporatio­n, which is already designated by the United States and the United Nations and is said to support the North’s defense industry. The Treasury Department said the company’s procuremen­ts also probably support North Korea’s chemical weapons program.

Half of the individual­s are located in the Chinese cities of Dandong, Ji’an, Linjiang and Tumen near the China-North Korea border. Others are based in Russia and Abkhazia, a breakaway province of Georgia. They include, Kim Ho Kyu, said to be a Ryonbong representa­tive and North Korean vice consul in Nakhodka, Russia.

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