Taiwan man convicted for N. Korea oil sales jumps to death

AFP  |  Taipei 

Taiwan's justice ministry has expressed after a convicted over sales to leapt to his death.

Authorities launched a probe into Shih-hsien last year after said it had detained a Hong Kong-registered ship suspected of transferring to a North Korean vessel, flouting UN sanctions.

Chen, 54, was later indicted on forgery charges 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 the

A district court in southern city last month sentenced him to 119 days in jail, suspended for two years.

Chen's assets were frozen after imposed a ban on all financial dealings with him and locked up his companies' due to the probe, which he was appealing against.

The justice ministry said in a statement it deeply regretted the passing of Chen, who jumped from a building on Friday in a suspected suicide.

said left a "suicide note" while prosecutors were not immediately available for comment.

Chen's case revolved around a ship called the Lighthouse Winmore, which was impounded in late 2017 by South Korean authorities after it allegedly transferred 600 tonnes of oil to the North's 2.

The vessel was chartered by the Billions Bunker Group, which is incorporated in the and run by

Reports said Chen sold through "a Chinese middleman".

However, he had insisted to reporters that he was "framed by China" and had attempted suicide in January last year when the authorities froze his assets.

The US had 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: Mon, June 24 2019. 09:55 IST