U.S. commerce chief says he is likely to
divest Russia-linked shipping stake
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[November 07, 2017]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Commerce
Secretary Wilbur Ross said on Monday he probably would not keep his
holdings in a shipping company with business ties to Russian President
Vladimir Putin's inner circle and that he had fully and properly
disclosed investments.
Pressed on whether he would retain the interest in Navigator Holdings,
Ross told Bloomberg Television: "I've been actually selling it anyway,
but that isn't because of this."
Ross, a billionaire investor who is helping to shape Republican
President Donald Trump's trade policy, was criticized when several media
outlets reported that he had failed to disclose that one of Navigator's
clients is Russian gas and petrochemical company Sibur.
Sibur's owners include Putin's son-in-law, Kirill Shamalov, and Gennady
Timchenko, a Putin associate who is subject to U.S. Treasury sanctions.
The information is based on leaked documents from offshore law firm
Appleby that are part of the so-called Paradise Papers, which show
details of business dealings by wealthy people and institutions ranging
from Ross to Britain's Queen Elizabeth and trading firm Glencore
<GLEN.L>. They were obtained by Germany's Sueddeutsche Zeitung newspaper
and shared with the International Consortium of Investigative
Journalists (ICIJ) and some media outlets and published on Sunday.
Reuters has not independently verified the documents.
The Paradise Papers are the second release of its kind by the ICIJ,
which last year published the "Panama Papers," leaked documents from
Panama law firm Mossack Fonseca that chronicled a shadowy world of
offshore holdings and hidden wealth.
Ross said in multiple media interviews that he had fully disclosed his
stake in Navigator Holdings as part of government ethics requirements.
"There was disclosure, there is no impropriety and if people draw a
contrary conclusion that's because the papers have twisted the story and
made it into something that it's not there," Ross told the BBC.
U.S. media said partnerships used by Ross have a 31 percent stake in
Navigator Holdings, which was included in Ross' 57-page public financial
disclosure report filed in December, before he officially joined the
Trump administration.
Richard Blumenthal, a Democrat on the U.S. Senate Commerce Committee,
said Ross had deceived the public as well as lawmakers who had confirmed
his appointment to Trump's Cabinet after he promised to divest holdings
that posed conflicts.
Blumenthal called for an investigation and hearings.
"If he fails to present a clear and compelling explanation, he ought to
resign," Blumenthal told MSNBC.
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Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross speaks to the Economic Club of New
York in New York City, U.S., October 25, 2017. REUTERS/Brendan
McDermid
Senate Commerce Committee spokesman Frederick Hill said that Ross'
interest in Navigator was disclosed to the panel, but added: "The
committee expects Secretary Ross will follow the advice of his
department’s ethics officials should there be a determination that
any holding creates a conflict of interest."
Navigator did not come up at Ross' confirmation hearing in January,
but he was asked about his decision to retain an interest in Diamond
S Shipping, which operates 33 petroleum product tankers.
Ross said his research showed that no ocean shipping cases had ever
come before the Commerce Department. Ocean shipping is regulated by
the Federal Maritime Commission, an independent agency.
But asked by Democratic Senator Maria Cantwell if he would look at
additional areas for possible further recusals from potential
conflicts of interest, Ross replied: "I intend to be quite
scrupulous about recusal in any topic where there is the slightest
scintilla of a doubt."
Scrutiny of any ties between Russia and Trump administration
officials has intensified with investigations into allegations by
U.S. intelligence agencies that Russia interfered in the 2016 U.S.
election campaign and potential collusion by the Trump campaign. The
Kremlin has denied such meddling and Trump has denied any collusion.
Officials from Navigator could not be reached for comment.
Appleby released a statement late on Sunday saying that the release
of its documents was the result of "an illegal computer hack" and
not a leak.
"This was not the work of anybody who works at Appleby," the firm
with offices in Bermuda, the Cayman Islands, Hong Kong and other
offshore jurisdictions said. Appleby said there was no evidence of
any wrongdoing.
(Reporting by David Lawder; additional reporting by Barbara Lewis,
Mike Holden, Andy MacAskill and Andy Bruce in London, Katya
Golubkova in Moscow, and Susan Heavey in Washington; Editing by
Frances Kerry and Grant McCool)
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