A Singapore court on Friday fined a shipping company nearly USD 127,000 for wiring money used to transport fighter jets and surface-to-air missile systems from Cuba to North Korea in 2013 in violation of bans on helping Pyongyang build up its weapons programs.
The haul, hidden under heaps of sugar and discovered by Panamanian authorities, was the biggest load of arms and related materials ever to be intercepted on its way to or from the isolated North.
The state court found that Singapore-registered Chinpo Shipping company had transferred tens of thousands of dollars for the shipment without conducting due diligence.
In delivering the sentence, District Judge Jasvender Kaur said the fine had to act as general deterrence due to "strong public interest in preventing any breaches of United Nations sanctions.
"It conducted no due diligence. Such irresponsible actions must be deterred," the judge said.
Chinpo had wired USD 72,017 from its Bank of China account to a Panama-based shipping agent in July 2013 for the return passage of the MV Chong Chon Gang through the Panama Canal.
The MV Chong Chon Gang was managed by the North Korean company Ocean Maritime Management, a longtime client of Chinpo.
That month, Panamanian authorities found the ship loaded with arms and related materials weighing 474 tons, including two MiG-21 fighter jets, anti-tank rockets and SA-2 and SA-3 Russian surface-to-air missile systems. The military equipment was hidden under 10,500 tons of sugar in the cargo hold.
Chinpo had applied for a total of 605 outward remittances totaling USD 40 million from 2009 to 2013 on behalf of North Korean entities.
Chinpo Director Tan Cheng Hoe, who also heads associated companies Tonghee Shipping Agency and Great Best Trading, said in court after the sentence: "We were wrongly accused."
When Associated Press visited Chinpo's listed address last month, another company said it has occupied the premises for more than a year.
Chinpo violated a law based on UN sanctions that prohibits the provision of financial services, assets or resources to North Korea that "may be reasonably be used to contribute to the nuclear-related, ballistic missile-related, or other weapons of mass destruction-related programs or activities.
The haul, hidden under heaps of sugar and discovered by Panamanian authorities, was the biggest load of arms and related materials ever to be intercepted on its way to or from the isolated North.
The state court found that Singapore-registered Chinpo Shipping company had transferred tens of thousands of dollars for the shipment without conducting due diligence.
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The company had been found guilty last month of contributing to the nuclear-related programs or activities of North Korea and of running a remittance business without a valid license for more than four years.
In delivering the sentence, District Judge Jasvender Kaur said the fine had to act as general deterrence due to "strong public interest in preventing any breaches of United Nations sanctions.
"It conducted no due diligence. Such irresponsible actions must be deterred," the judge said.
Chinpo had wired USD 72,017 from its Bank of China account to a Panama-based shipping agent in July 2013 for the return passage of the MV Chong Chon Gang through the Panama Canal.
The MV Chong Chon Gang was managed by the North Korean company Ocean Maritime Management, a longtime client of Chinpo.
That month, Panamanian authorities found the ship loaded with arms and related materials weighing 474 tons, including two MiG-21 fighter jets, anti-tank rockets and SA-2 and SA-3 Russian surface-to-air missile systems. The military equipment was hidden under 10,500 tons of sugar in the cargo hold.
Chinpo had applied for a total of 605 outward remittances totaling USD 40 million from 2009 to 2013 on behalf of North Korean entities.
Chinpo Director Tan Cheng Hoe, who also heads associated companies Tonghee Shipping Agency and Great Best Trading, said in court after the sentence: "We were wrongly accused."
When Associated Press visited Chinpo's listed address last month, another company said it has occupied the premises for more than a year.
Chinpo violated a law based on UN sanctions that prohibits the provision of financial services, assets or resources to North Korea that "may be reasonably be used to contribute to the nuclear-related, ballistic missile-related, or other weapons of mass destruction-related programs or activities.