Taiwan businessman indicted over North Korea oil sales

AFP  |  Taipei 

A Taiwanese has been indicted over sales to North Korea, prosecutors said today, flouting UN sanctions against the nuclear-armed regime.

Chen has now been charged with forgery for making a false declaration that a ship he had chartered was bound for Hong Kong when it actually sailed to international waters to sell oil, district prosecutors said in a statement.

"Chen was well aware that the he purchased was being shipped to international waters for sale... and made four false declarations in 2017," the statement added.

announced in September it was banning all trade activities with

have reported that Chen sold through "a Chinese middleman".

However, Chen has insisted to reporters that he was "framed by China" and attempted suicide on January 19 after announced a ban on all financial dealings with him and froze his companies' due to the probe.

Sources have told AFP Chen claimed to prosecutors that he did not know the were bound for a North Korean vessel.

He is currently on bail and has been barred from leaving

The case revolves around a ship called the Lighthouse Winmore, which was impounded in November by South Korean authorities after it allegedly transferred 600 tonnes of oil to the North's 2.

The vessel was chartered by the which is incorporated in the Islands.

The group is actually run by Chen, according to the prosecutors' statement. The US has previously asked the Security Council to blacklist 10 ships -- including the -- for violating sanctions against the North.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, July 05 2018. 11:10 IST