US slaps fresh sanctions against North Korea
The United States has slapped fresh sanctions against defiant North Korea, aimed at choking off the regime's arms trade, freezing assets of individuals, and groups linked to Pyongyang's secretive nuclear programme. The sanctions are specifically targeted against Office 39 - a secretive branch of the North Korean government that manages slush funds and raises money for the leadership, including by trafficking drugs. The sanctions also targets North Korea's infrastructure for importing and exporting conventional arms - Green Pine Associated Corporation and its parent, the Reconnaissance General Bureau and bureau's commander Lt. Gen. Kim Yong Chol. Other entities include two trading firms — Korea Taesong Trading Company and Korea Heungjin Trading Company — that allegedly act on behalf of North Korean arms dealer KOMID in deals involving Iran and Syria. "The order gives the US government new authority to go after the arms sales and goods procurement, money laundering, counterfeiting of currency and other illicit financial activities that enrich the highest echelons of the North Korean government while the North Korean people suffer," Under Secretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence Stuart Levey said after President, Mr Barack Obama, issued an order. Noting that the world is well aware of North Korean government's record of illicit activity and its belligerent behaviour, Levey said, the President decided that North Korea's continued provocative actions such as its test of a nuclear device and missile launches in 2009, its violations of UN Security Council Resolutions and its illicit and deceptive practises in international markets - justify fresh sanctions. "The destructive course that North Korean government is charting is facilitated by a lifeline of cash generated through a range of illicit activities. North Korea's government helps maintain its authority by placating privileged elites with money and perks, such as luxury goods like jewellery, luxury cars and yachts," he said. "Not only do these transactions contravene UN Security Council Resolution 1718, they are unconscionable in light of the fact that many of North Korea's people live in dire poverty," Levey said, adding the North Korean government receives millions of dollars every year from arms sales that are also outlawed by UN Security Council resolutions. The North Korean government, he alleged, also benefits from illicit activities such as drug trafficking, counterfeiting of US currency and selling counterfeit cigarettes. Asserting that these measures are not directed at the people of North Korea, he said the financial measures are aimed at disrupting its efforts to engage in illicit activities and its ability to surreptitiously move its money by deceiving banks and smuggling cash worldwide.
Post new comment