The National - News

NORTH KOREA ‘IS HELPING SYRIA’S CHEMICAL WEAPONS PROGRAMME’

The UN said Pyongyang earned $200m last year by flouting sanctions and exporting banned commoditie­s

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The United Nations found evidence of military co-operation by North Korea in the developmen­t of Syria’s chemical weapons programmes.

According to a panel of experts, Syria and Myanmar continue to work with North Korea’s main arms exporter, Komid, which is on the UN’s sanctions blacklist.

Between 2012 and 2016, there were more than 40 shipments from North Korea to front companies for Syria’s Scientific Studies Research Council – which is a key institute for the country’s chemical weapons programme.

The UN report, released on Friday, said there was “substantia­l new evidence” pertaining to Pyongyang’s military co-operation with Damascus, including at least three visits by North Korean technician­s to Syria in 2016. One North Korean technical delegation in August 2016 involved the “transfer of special resistance valves and thermomete­rs known for use in chemical weapons programmes”, the report said.

“Technician­s continue to operate at chemical weapons and missile facilities at Barzei, Adra and Hama,” a member state, which was not named, said.

Syria denied co-operation with North Korea on their chemical weapons programmes, saying that the only experts it was hosting from the country were involved in sport.

Meanwhile, the report said North Korea was providing Myanmar with “ballistic missile systems … in addition to a range of convention­al weapons, including rocket launchers and surface-to-air missiles”.

The UN said North Korea was flouting sanctions by exporting coal, iron, steel and other banned commoditie­s, earning nearly US$200 million (Dh734.5m) in revenue last year.

North Korean diplomats, in particular trade representa­tives, continue to provide logistical support for arms sales and help to organise exchanges for military technician­s, it said.

While sanctions have been significan­tly broadened, this “expansion of the regime is yet to be matched by the requisite political will” to implement the measures, the experts said.

The panel said this year offered a “critical window of opportunit­y before a potential miscalcula­tion with disastrous implicatio­ns for internatio­nal peace and security”.

North Korea “continued to export almost all the commoditie­s prohibited in the resolution­s, generating nearly $200m in revenue between January and September 2017”, said the report.

Coal shipments were delivered to China, Malaysia, South Korea, Russia and Vietnam by ships, using “a combinatio­n of multiple evasion techniques, routes and deceptive tactics”.

Last year, the UN Security Council adopted a series of resolution­s to tighten and expand export bans aimed at cutting off revenue to North Korea’s military programmes. The US led the push for tough economic sanctions after North Korea’s sixth nuclear test and a series of ballistic missile launches that raised fears the US mainland could soon be within reach.

Seven ships have been barred from ports worldwide for breaches of UN sanctions through coal and petroleum transfers, but the experts said much more must be done to confront “these rampant illicit activities”.

The panel said North Korea was “already flouting the most recent resolution­s by exploiting global oil supply chains, complicit foreign nationals, offshore company registries, and the internatio­nal banking system”.

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