Exclusive: From Russia with fuel - North
Korean ships may be undermining sanctions
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[September 20, 2017]
By Polina Nikolskaya
MOSCOW (Reuters) - At least eight North
Korean ships that left Russia with a cargo of fuel this year headed for
their homeland despite declaring other destinations, a ploy that U.S.
officials say is often used to undermine sanctions.
Reuters has no evidence of wrongdoing by the vessels, whose movements
were recorded in Reuters ship-tracking data. Changing a ship's
destination once underway is not forbidden and it is unclear whether any
of the ships unloaded fuel in North Korea.
But U.S. officials say that changing destination mid-voyage is a
hallmark of North Korean state tactics to circumvent the international
trade sanctions imposed over Pyongyang's nuclear weapons program.
Changing course and the complex chain of different firms --many offshore
-- involved in shipments can complicate efforts to check how much fuel
is supplied to North Korea and monitor compliance with a cap on fuel
imports under U.N. sanctions.
"As part of North Korea's efforts to acquire revenue, the regime uses
shipping networks to import and export goods," U.S. Assistant Secretary
of the Treasury Marshall S. Billingslea told the Congressional Foreign
Affairs Committee this month.
"North Korea employs deceptive practices to conceal the true origins of
these goods. Pyongyang has been found to routinely falsify a vessel's
identity and documentation."
VOYAGE OF THE MA DU SAN
The eight vessels identified in the tracking data set sail from the Far
Eastern Russian port of Vladivostok or nearby Nakhodka and registered
China or South Korea as their destination with the Information System
for State Port Control.
After leaving Russia, they were next recorded off the North Korean ports
of Kimchaek, Chongjin, Hungnam or Najin. None went on to China and most
went back to Russia.
All had a cargo of diesel, a source at the company that services vessels
in Vladivostok said. Their cargo capacity ranged from 500 tonnes to
2,000 tonnes.
One of the vessels was the Ma Du San, owned by North Korea's Korea
Kyongun Shipping Co. It took on a cargo of 545 tonnes of marine fuel at
Vladivostok's Pervaya Rechka terminal, owned by Russia's Independent
Petroleum company (IPC).
Reuters obtained a bill of lading -- a receipt for goods issued when a
ship loads up -- dated May 19 showing the Ma Du San's cargo came from
Khabarovskiy NPZ, a refinery owned by IPC.
The ship set sail on May 20. Documents filed with Russia's Information
System for State Port Control stated its next destination as the Chinese
port of Zhanjiang and the bill of lading showed it as Busan in South
Korea.
The Ma Du San's next recorded location after Vladivostok was inside the
perimeter of the port of Kimchaek -- all the other ships were tracked
only in the vicinity of ports. North Korean ships intermittently turn
off their transponders, and satellites cannot track them at such times,
U.S. officials say.
Allegations outlined in two U.S. Treasury Department sanctions orders
and a legal complaint filed by the U.S. government match the information
Reuters obtained on the Ma Du San though the U.S. documents do not name
the vessel involved.
SANCTIONS BLACKLIST
On June 1, the U.S. Treasury Department included IPC on its sanctions
blacklist, saying it provided oil to North Korea and may have been
involved in circumventing sanctions.
On Aug. 22, the U.S. government sanctioned two more companies, both
registered in Singapore -- Transatlantic Partners and Velmur Management
Pte. Ltd.
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A general view shows a commercial port in Vladivostok, Russia, July
27, 2014. REUTERS/Yuri Maltsev
The legal complaint, also filed on Aug. 22, accused the two firms of
money laundering on behalf of sanctioned North Korean banks seeking
to buy petroleum products, citing a bill of lading for May 19 for a
cargo of diesel sold by IPC to Velmur and loaded in Vladivostok --
the same date as the bill of lading for the Ma Du San.
Andrey Serbin, who represents Transatlantic Partners, said the firm
had not received payments from a sanctions-hit bank and that
ownership of the fuel changed after it was loaded.
"We sold the fuel to a Chinese company," Serbin, who has been
blacklisted by the U.S. government for "operating in the energy
industry in the North Korean economy" and working to purchase fuel
for delivery to North Korea, said of several shipments where the
company acted as middleman.
"There's no way we can control them (the goods)," he said.
Serbin did not identify the vessels Transatlantic Partners loaded
fuel on to, but a source in a company that services ships in
Vladivostok said the Ma Du San was among them.
The bill of lading named the recipient of the Ma Du San's cargo as a
company called LLC Sky Shipping Limited. Reuters was unable to find
any record of such a firm.
Velmur said it could not have known where the cargo would end up and
did not knowingly help anyone dodge sanctions.
IPC did not respond to a request for comment. Its parent company,
Bermuda-registered Alliance Oil Company Ltd., denied having any
contractual relations with North Korean companies when U.S.
sanctions were imposed on IPC.
The U.S. Treasury and State departments declined to answer questions
about Reuters' findings.
Russia's foreign ministry did not respond to questions about fuel
exports to North Korea but has said Russia complies with the
sanctions. Russia's customs service said it could not provide
information about movement of goods across borders.
Since the U.S. sanctions were imposed on IPC, all North
Korean-flagged vessels that had been in Vladivostok port have left,
according to the tracking data.
They departed with no cargo, an employee with a shipping agent in
Vladivostok said. This is confirmed by documents seen by Reuters.
Russian supplies of oil and oil products to North Korea are much
smaller than volumes shipped by China, Pyongyang's only major ally.
Beijing has acted to reduce the flows, but Russia's trade in all
goods with North Korea more than doubled in the first quarter of
2017 to $31.4 million.
Moscow's trade with Pyongyang is under closer scrutiny following a
series of missile launches by North Korea and a test involving what
it said was a hydrogen bomb.
(Additional reporting by David Brunnstrom in WASHINGTON, Chen Aizhu
in BEIJING, James Pearson in SEOUL, Katya Golubkova, Gleb Stolyarov,
Vladimir Soldatkin and Olesya Astakhova in MOSCOW; Editing by
Christian Lowe and Timothy Heritage)
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