United States accuses Russia of altering North Korea sanctions

September 14, 2018
| Report Focus News

UNITED NATIONS – Russia is being accused by the United States on Thursday of pressuring an independent panel of U.N. experts to alter a report on sanctions against North Korea that included alleged sanctions violations “implicating Russian actors.”

Russia at the end of August had blocked publication of the report on the implementation of sanctions against North Korea because it disagreed with findings that Pyongyang had exceeded a 2018 import cap for oil set by the sanctions imposed last year, a diplomatic source said last month.

Sources at that time also said Russia blocked a US request that two Russian shipping companies and six of their vessels be sanctioned over oil shipments to the North.

“Russia can’t be allowed to edit and obstruct independent UN reports on North Korea sanctions just because they don’t like what they say,” Washington’s UN Ambassador Nikki Haley said in a statement.

| Report Focus News
She accused the UN panel of “caving to Russian pressure” and making changes to its report.

“This is a dangerous precedent and a stain on the important work of the Panel,” Haley said, calling for the initial version of the report — dating from early August — to be published.

The US in July had demanded without success an end to all oil exports to North Korea, citing satellite photos and expert reports to claim illegal ship-to-ship transfers had allowed Pyongyang to evade sanctions over its nuclear weapons and ballistic missile programs.

In its original report the UN panel included the names of Russian ships and entities that had contravened UN sanctions, opening the way for international measures against them.

Russia “obtained the removal of the main part of the paragraphs” concerning it, a diplomat said, speaking anonymously.

“The Sanctions Committee gave in,” a move raising questions about its independence, he said.

By blocking since early August release of the original document, Russia explained that the report relied mainly on American information and did not take into account a Russian analysis of the application of sanctions.

Haley said Russian interference “sets an unacceptable precedent that damages the sanctity of the U.N. independent panel reporting process.”