Advertisement

Singapore shipping firm fined for North Korea-linked arms

A MIG 21 fighter jet, the same type of fighter a Singapore shipping company was fined for trying to move to North Korea from Cuba

A Singapore shipping firm was fined Friday for its role in an attempt to smuggle Soviet-era weapons and fighter jets from Cuba to North Korea in 2013. Chinpo Shipping Company Pte Ltd was found guilty by a Singapore district court of paying for a North Korean freighter to transit through the Panama Canal, in violation of UN sanctions. A UN report quoted in 2014 said Chinpo Shipping had acted as an agent for a Pyongyang-based company that operated the intercepted vessel. Chinpo Shipping "transferred financial assets or resources that may reasonably be used to contribute to the nuclear-related programmes or activities of" North Korea, a charge sheet said. This was in breach of UN sanctions aimed at curbing North Korea's nuclear programme. Chinpo Shipping was found guilty in December of wiring $72,000 to a shipping agent in Panama on July 8, 2013 to facilitate the passage of the North Korean freighter, Chong Chon Gang, through the Panama Canal. The Singapore court also convicted Chinpo Shipping of a second charge of conducting a remittance business without a licence. The ship, bound for North Korea from Cuba, was intercepted and searched while navigating the Panama Canal on July 10, 2013. Authorities discovered 25 containers of military hardware, including two Soviet-era MiG-21 fighters, air defence systems, missiles and command and control vehicles, buried under 200,000 bags of sugar. Cuba had argued that the weapons were "obsolete" which the communist island had sent to Pyongyang for repair. But the find raised concerns about Cuba's military cooperation with North Korea. In June last year, a court in Panama jailed two of the ship's North Korean officers for 12 years in relation to the smuggling attempt. Captain Ri Yong-Il and first mate Hong Yong-Hyon were convicted of arms trafficking over the undeclared cache. The rest of the crew of more than 30 on the Chong Chon Gang were earlier acquitted.