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SEOUL (Reuters) – South Korean prosecutors have charged four people with illegally importing millions of dollars worth of North Korean coal in violation of international sanctions, by trying to disguise it as imports from Russia, a prosecutors’ office said on Monday.
South Korea’s customs agency found in August that some firms had imported coal from North Korea in violation of U.N. resolutions aimed at choking off funding for its nuclear and ballistic missile programs.
The unidentified defendants were charged on Friday with bringing in North Korean coal and other material by “laundering the origin” through fake certificates of origin from Russian ports, after the old route for North Korean coal, through China, was blocked due to sanctions, the Daegu District Public Prosecutors Office said in a statement.
“It appears that the defendants wanted profit from arbitrage, using the fact that the prices of North Korean coal and other materials are low due to their difficulty to be traded internationally,” the office said.
One of the four, a 44-year-old woman, was arrested for bringing in some 28,962 tonnes of coal and 2,010 tonnes of pig iron from North Korea, worth about 4.3 billion won ($3.83 million) and 1.1 billion won respectively, between April-October 2017, the office said.
South Korea’s Inter-Korean Exchange and Cooperation Act prohibits the import of North Korean products without special approval from the minister of unification.
The woman was also charged with violating customs law by bringing in some 4,156 tonnes of coal briquettes from North Korea, worth about 800 million won, by falsifying customs records to say they were semi coke, the office said.
The other three people, who are indicted without arrest, were found to have brought in, or abetted the import of, millions of dollars worth of North Korean coal, pig iron and, or, coal briquettes during that time, the office said.
The U.N. Security Council banned North Korea’s sale of coal, iron, iron ore, lead, lead ore and seafood in August last year in a bid to cut by a third its $3 billion annual export income.
It also capped North Korea’s import of crude oil and refined petroleum products in September.
The United States has led the sanctions campaign to press North Korea to give up its nuclear and missile programs, but there have been signs that the U.S. campaign for “maximum pressure” has lost steam since North Korea sought to improve relations with South Korea, China, and the United States.
U.S. President Donald Trump met North Korean leader Kim Jong Un for an unprecedented summit in Singapore in June to discuss North Korea’s denuclearization and the easing sanctions..
Trump said this month he expected to met Kim again in January or February.
($1 = 1,124.0000 won)
Reporting by Joyce Lee; Editing by Robert Birsel
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
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