Singapore has suspended trade ties with North Korea in the latest
move by a country to implement UN sanctions to curb Pyongyang’s nuclear
weapons programme, a customs document showed Thursday.
A circular by Singapore Customs on its website banned “all
commercially traded goods… from or to the Democratic People’s Republic
of Korea (DPRK), regardless of whether they are imported,
exported,
transhipped or brought in transit through Singapore” with effect from
November 8.
DPRK is North Korea’s formal name.
The United States is leading a drive at the UN Security Council to
impose two recent sets of sanctions on North Korea to punish Pyongyang
over its nuclear and missile tests.
Singapore Customs sent the notice to traders and agents on Tuesday.
It warned violators they can be fined up to Sg$100,000 ($74,000) or
three times the value of the goods traded, or suffer a jail term of up
to two years, or suffer both penalties, for the first offence.
Repeat violators will be subject to stiffer penalties.
The North carried out its sixth nuclear test — and most powerful to
date — on September 3, sparking international outrage and a fresh round
of sanctions.
International powers hope that economic sanctions will deprive the
North of the resources it needs to pursue its nuclear programme and
pressure it into negotiating.
“I think it is a matter of time when most Southeast Asian countries
would do the same, so it is especially appropriate that Singapore as the
region’s major trading power takes the lead,” Oh Ei Sun, a senior
fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in
Singapore, told AFP.
He said that on top of Pyongyang’s repeated nuclear tests, the
assassination of Kim Jong-Nam, North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un’s half
brother, in Malaysia last February also “stiffened the resolve of the
Southeast Asian countries to sever substantial ties with North Korea”.
Kim Jong-Nam, who was estranged from the leader, was about to board a
plane from Kuala Lumpur’s international airport when assassins poisoned
him with the banned nerve agent VX, according to Malaysian officials.
He died minutes later.
The murder sparked a furious row between North Korea and Malaysia,
with the South blaming Pyongyang for ordering the killing. North Korea
has denied the allegation.
Singapore has a standing advisory on citizens against non-essential
travel to North Korea. With effect from October last year, Singapore
also required North Koreans to have visas before travelling to the
city-state.
North Korea has an embassy in Singapore but the latter has no representation in Pyongyang.
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Thursday, 16 November 2017
Singapore suspends trade ties with North Korea
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