US Treasury Imposes New Sanctions on Iranian Companies

The US Treasury building. (AFP)
The US Treasury building. (AFP)
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US Treasury Imposes New Sanctions on Iranian Companies

The US Treasury building. (AFP)
The US Treasury building. (AFP)

The United States imposed new sanctions Thursday on Iran-linked shipping and petrochemical companies, including two shipping firms based in China.

The sanctions also target 20 shipping vessels linked to firms in China, Vietnam, and the United Arab Emirates, the Treasury Department's website showed.

The sanctions were issued under a 2018 US executive order that restored sanctions targeting Iran's oil, banking, and transportation sectors.

The US sanctioned weeks ago nine entities across multiple jurisdictions that have played a critical role in the production, sale, and shipment of hundreds of millions of dollars worth of Iranian petrochemicals and petroleum to buyers in Asia.

These sanctions are the latest measure by the US President Joe Biden administration to limit the Iranian government's ability to earn money from the energy products subject to sanctions.

Meanwhile, the efforts to revive the Iranian nuclear deal remain stalled, while Iran continues to provide Russia with drones to use in its invasion of Ukraine.

Iran is increasingly turning to buyers in East Asia to sell its petrochemical and petroleum products, in violation of US sanctions, said Brian Nelson, Under Secretary of the Treasury for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence.

“The United States remains focused on targeting Tehran’s sources of illicit revenue and will continue to enforce its sanctions against those who wittingly facilitate this trade,” he added.



Russia Detains German Man Accused of Blowing up Gas Distribution Pipe

A military vehicle in Kaliningrad. (Reuters file)
A military vehicle in Kaliningrad. (Reuters file)
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Russia Detains German Man Accused of Blowing up Gas Distribution Pipe

A military vehicle in Kaliningrad. (Reuters file)
A military vehicle in Kaliningrad. (Reuters file)

Russia has detained a German citizen on suspicion of explosives-smuggling and terrorism, accusing him of blowing up a pipe at a gas distribution station, the Federal Security Service (FSB) said on Wednesday.

The FSB said the man, whom it named as Nikolai Gaiduk, had been involved in the attack in Russia's Kaliningrad Baltic Sea exclave in March, using a home-made bomb.

It said he was arrested during a subsequent attempt to enter Kaliningrad from Poland, when authorities searched his car and found 0.5 liters of liquid explosive.

The FSB said Gaiduk was born in 1967 and lives in Hamburg. It accused him of acting on the instructions of a Ukrainian man also living in the north German city.

"Currently, measures are being taken to identify and bring to justice the persons who assisted Gaiduk ... in carrying out illegal activities," the agency said.

The German foreign ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

According to Russia's emergencies ministry, the pipe explosion in March caused a fire but there were no casualties.