Iran Nuclear NewsEU tightens sanctions on Iran over nuclear program

EU tightens sanctions on Iran over nuclear program

-

ImageAP: The European Union tightened trade sanctions against Iran Friday for defying a long-standing international demand to freeze uranium enrichment.

The Associated Press

By AOIFE WHITE

ImageBRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) — The European Union tightened trade sanctions against Iran Friday for defying a long-standing international demand to freeze uranium enrichment.

The new EU restrictions go slightly beyond existing U.N. trade sanctions and are designed to deny public loans or export credits to companies trading with Iran. France, which holds the rotating EU presidency, said European governments would also carefully watch financial groups doing business with Iranian banks and step up checks on ships and airplanes traveling to Iran.

"This resolution expands the range of restrictive measures adopted by the U.N. Security Council," an EU statement said. It called on member nations to "show restraint when granting new public loans for trade with Iran … (and) to also be vigilant on activities taken by financial institutions with banks based in Iran."

Iran has refused to comply with repeated international demands to halt uranium enrichment, a process that can be used to produce fuel for nuclear weapons or nuclear energy. The U.S. suspects the program is aimed at making nuclear weapons though Iran insists it is for peaceful purposes.

Earlier this week, France and the U.S. said Iran's response was insufficient to defuse the dispute because it has skirted the central question of whether it was ready to halt uranium enrichment.

The new sanctions expand existing limits on trade with Iran beyond the U.N. Security Council's three sets of sanctions that monitor trade and banking. But they do not go as far as sanctions on Iran's oil and gas trade that EU ministers threatened in June.

Britain, the United States and their allies want to go further with their own sanctions targeting oil and gas and the finance sector that could badly hit Iran's already fragile economy. The tough independent sanctions would be a bid to overcome opposition from veto-wielding Security Council members China and Russia to a hardening of U.N. sanctions, a senior British official said Friday.

Oil-rich Iran draws 80 percent of its revenues from energy exports and is already suffering high inflation and rampant unemployment.

The British official, who requested anonymity because of the sensitivity of ongoing negotiations, said the measures would be in addition to — not in place of — a fourth set of tougher U.N. Security Council penalties, which Britain expects to be considered in New York in October or November, and the newly tightened EU trade sanctions.

The EU's head office, the European Commission, separately began implementing on Thursday the third round of U.N. sanctions agreed in March. Those measures prevent some Iranian officials from getting EU visas and freeze the assets of people or companies involved in the nuclear program.

The U.N. sanctions also forbid European companies from selling some products that could help Iran build nuclear weapons.

Under the newly tightened EU sanctions approved Friday, EU countries will also now inspect airplanes and ships traveling to and from Iran if they have reason to believe that they are carrying contraband goods. France said they would focus on Iran Air Cargo and the Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Line.

European governments will also monitor banks dealing with Bank Saderat, an Iranian bank with purported links to suspect Iranian nuclear activities, under the tighter EU sanctions.

The EU is Iran's biggest trading partner with two-way trade totaling $39 billion in 2006.

The U.N. Security Council's five permanent members and Germany have tried to entice Iran into suspending uranium enrichment by offering a package of economic, technological and political incentives.

Iran said Tuesday it would only give a clear response to this offer when it gets a direct response on questions it has about the incentives.

Iran may soon face a fourth set of Security Council sanctions if it does not accept the incentives package.

Latest news

US Slaps New Sanctions on Iran’s Drone Program

On Thursday, April 25, the United States imposed new sanctions on the regimes of Iran and Russia. According to a...

Iran’s Regime Sentences Singer Toomaj Salehi to Death

Amir Reisian, Toomaj Salehi’s lawyer, says the so-called “Revolutionary Court” in an "unprecedented" move has sentenced this dissident singer...

Iran Faces Severe Medicine Shortage and Lack of Government Funding

The Health and Treatment Commission of Iranian regime’s Majlis (parliament) recently released a report highlighting the dire situation of...

U.S. House of Representatives and Senate Approve Measures Targeting Iran’s Regime

In a resolute move showcasing bipartisan unity towards addressing the Iranian regime's actions, the United States House of Representatives...

Grossi: Iran Weeks Away from Having Enough Enriched Uranium for Atomic Bomb

Rafael Grossi, the Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), has stated that Iran is just weeks...

In the past two years, 8 million people added to Iran’s poor population

According to information analyzed by the state-run Etemad newspaper regarding poverty rate data, a 10% increase in the poverty...

Must read

India mulls solution to Iran oil payments: finmin official

Reuters: India is looking at making payments to Iran...

Azerbaijan to try 29 over Eurovision plot

AFP: The ministry said at the time that the...

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you