Gulf News

Iran puts off anti-terror group debate

TEHRAN NOT TO JOIN UN BODY FOR TWO MONTHS AS IT AWAITS NUCLEAR DEAL FATE

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Iran’s parliament voted yesterday to suspend discussion of joining the UN Terrorism Financing Convention for two months, while it waits to see whether its nuclear deal with world powers will survive.

The decision is part of an often furious debate among Iranian lawmakers over joining internatio­nal convention­s on money-laundering and terrorist financing.

It is currently alone with North Korea on the blacklist of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), adding to its woes in accessing global banking. Its status is due for review by the FATF later this month.

But conservati­ve lawmakers strongly oppose new laws aimed at bringing Iran up to internatio­nal standards, in the works since last year, and unveiled huge petitions against joining the Terrorism Financing Convention on the floor of parliament yesterday.

They said it would cut off Iranian support to key regional allies, Lebanese Hezbollah and Palestinia­n Hamas, whose military wings are designated as terrorist organisati­ons by the United States and European Union, among others. They also said the legislatio­n would condemn members of Iran’s Revolution­ary Guards listed as terrorists by the US, including the head of its external operations, Qassem Sulaimani.

Designed by enemies

“Why do we want to bind ourselves to frameworks and requiremen­ts which have been designed by our enemies?” said Hussaini Naghavi Hussaini, spokesman for parliament’s National Security and Foreign Policy commission.

Abbas Araghchi, deputy foreign minister, defended the efforts to join the FATF.

“This very parliament was the victim of Daesh terrorism this time last year ... Without internatio­nal cooperatio­n and joining internatio­nal convention­s, it is impossible to confront it,” said Araghchi.

“Inside the country there are some holes and weaknesses in banking networks, which unfortunat­ely facilitate­s terrorist groups and drug-smuggling,” he added.

Daesh carried out twin attacks last June on Iran’s parliament and the tomb of revolution­ary founder Ruhollah Khomeini, killing 17.

The other parties to the nuclear deal – Britain, France, Germany, China and Russia – are working to salvage the deal and maintain trade ties, but most internatio­nal banks already refuse to work with Iran for fear of US penalties.

“They didn’t have financial and monetary ties with us during the JCPOA (nuclear deal). How can we expect to have such ties after joining this convention?” said Naghavi-Hosseini.

Lawmakers voted 138 to 103 (with six abstention­s) on suspending the discussion around the Terrorism Financing Convention for two months, while they wait to see how the nuclear deal discussion­s play out, according to ISNA.

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