Chinese Companies Sanctioned for Proliferation
On July 9, the Bush administration sanctioned nine Chinese entities
and an Indian individual for knowingly contributing to the efforts
of Iran and possibly Iraq to acquire weapons of mass destruction
or advanced conventional weapons.
Effective immediately, the sanctions, levied under the 1991 Chemical
and Biological Weapons Control and Warfare Elimination Act and the
1992 Iran-Iraq Arms Nonproliferation Act, prohibit the United States
from conducting business with or providing financial or technical
assistance to any of the 10 entities. The sanctions, in place for
a year under the Chemical and Biological Weapons law and two years
under the Iran-Iraq law, also bar the United States from providing
the 10 entities with military and dual-use technology, items on
the U.S. Munitions List, and certain other items requiring a government-issued
export license.
These are the first entities to be sanctioned under the 10-year-old
Iran-Iraq law, which applies to entities that transfer goods or
technology that could assist either Iran or Iraq in acquiring chemical,
biological, nuclear, or destabilizing numbers and types of advanced
conventional weapons. The Chemical and Biological Weapons
law applies to entities transferring goods or technology that could
help any country or group to acquire, use or stockpile chemical
or biological weapons.
State Department officials declined to specify which entities were
transferring what types of items to which country, but in a July
19 press briefing State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said
that eight of the entities were being sanctioned for transfers to
Iran, and two were being sanctioned for helping Iran develop chemical
weapons.
As listed in the July 25 Federal Register, these Chinese companies
were sanctioned under both the Iran-Iraq law and the Chemical and
Biological Weapons law: Jiangsu Yongli Chemicals and Technology
Import and Export Corporation, China Machinery and Equipment Import
Export Corporation, China National Machinery and Equipment Import
Export Corporation, CMEC Machinery and Electric Equipment Import
and Export Company Ltd., CMEC Machinery and Electrical Import Export
Company Ltd., China Machinery and Electric Equipment Import and
Export Company, Wha Cheong Tai Company Ltd., and Chinese citizen
Q. C. Chen.
Sanctioned exclusively under the Iran-Iraq law were the China Shipbuilding
Trading Company and the Indian individual Hans Raj Shiv, who the
State Department believes resides in the Middle East.
Chinese companies have been sanctioned three times this year for
helping Iran to develop chemical or biological weapons. (See ACT,
March 2002 and June
2002.)
Five of the 10 entities have been previously penalized by U.S.
sanctions. Under the Iran Nonproliferation Act, which bans the transfer
of equipment that could aid Irans development of nuclear,
biological or chemical weapons, or ballistic or cruise missile systems,
the Jiangsu Yongli Chemicals and Technology Import and Export Corporation
was sanctioned in June 2001, the China Machinery and Electric Equipment
Import and Export Company in January 2002, and the Wha Cheong Tai
Company Ltd. and the China Shipbuilding Trading Company in May 2002.
This is the fourth time Chinese citizen Q. C. Chen has been charged
with violating U.S. nonproliferation laws since 1997.
If an entity is currently under previous sanctions, the new sanctions
extend the time they are subject to penalty, Boucher said.
Chinas Foreign Ministry expressed opposition to the U.S.
decision, calling the sanctions unreasonable, Agence
France-Presse reported July 22. China also called the sanctions
levied in January and May unreasonable. The sanctions
do not apply to the Chinese government.
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