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Offline MO_SOBOH

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Re: Iran sanctions news
« Reply #450 on: August 10, 2012, 07:28:35 AM »
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Bypassing Sanctions: Iran buys & sells US high-tech goods despite blockade Small | Large



Bypassing Sanctions: Iran buys & sells US high-tech goods despite blockade
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Re: Iran sanctions news
« Reply #451 on: August 10, 2012, 08:49:31 AM »
+1
I have been to this "Shopping center" before (upper Tehran). They sell lots of Asian stuff and indeed there are I-Crap signs here and there. But there are a lot of counterfeited items as well.

Offline Catsoo

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Re: Iran sanctions news
« Reply #452 on: August 10, 2012, 04:13:21 PM »
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Iran Oil Embargo Has Ripple Effect for Europe


 By Sarah Kent 

Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

An oil tanker is seen off the port of Bandar Abbas, southern Iran, last month. The six-month run-up to the implementation of a full European Union embargo on Iranian crude left many market watchers complacent about the impact sanctions would have on consumers in Europe.

By the time July 1 rolled around, most European refiners had already replaced Iranian oil with crude from other countries like Saudi Arabia, Russia and Iraq and oil prices were hovering near their lowest level since May.

And yet a significant dent to one Italian refiner’s profits in the second quarter suggests that although European refiners have kept the oil flowing, the cost of sanctions could still prove problematic.

Saras, one of Italy’s biggest private oil refiners announced a net loss of €131.8 million Friday despite a sharp drop in oil prices over the period.

“This movement of the market has been partially offset by the temporary disoptimizations on the availability of heavy crude oils, ahead of the oil embargo in Iran,” Chairman Gian Marco Moratti said in a statement by way of explanation.

Of course, that is only part of the story. Planned maintenance also dented Saras’ profits in the period and the European refining sector in general has struggled in recent years as a result of falling local demand and increased competition from high-tech refineries in Asia.

Still, there is no doubt the loss of Iranian crude is making a tough situation tougher still.

According to the International Energy Agency, Mediterranean refineries arguably have been the hardest hit by the latest sanctions; they have access to few immediately available substitutes to Iranian crude and the price of the default alternative, Russian Urals crude, shot up after the full EU embargo was implemented last month.

“The results for most European refiners were not particularly good for the second quarter,” said David Wech, head of research at JBC Energy, adding that soaring prices for crude grades of a similar quality to Iranian oil had diminished the benefit that refineries could reap from the fall in the benchmark price in the last quarter.

“Let’s say the Iran story has deepened the crude imbalance that is there anyway in a market where there is too much light, sweet stuff and not enough sour barrels,” he said

Indeed, speculation that U.S. and European Union sanctions against Iran could prove to be a damp squib, with Iranian oil simply redirected en masse to willing Asian buyers, freeing up other oil grades to flow back to Europe might have been overly optimistic.

According to the IEA, exports of Iranian crude plummeted by nearly 750,000 barrels a day last month to 1 million barrels a day, although this does bring the IEA figures more in line with data from other sources.

“If anything the sanctions look to be being even more successful than the EU and U.S. were planning,” said David Fyfe, head of the oil markets division at the IEA.

Still, many believe that July and August will be the toughest months for Iranian exports, and they could bounce back slightly in the Autumn as Asian buyers find ways to navigate the sanctions.

“Without question Iran had big problems to sell its crude in July but we think that that will improve from now on,” said JBC’s Mr. Wech.

http://blogs.wsj.com/source/2012/08/10/iran-oil-embargo-has-ripple-effect-for-europe/

Offline Catsoo

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Re: Iran sanctions news
« Reply #453 on: August 13, 2012, 04:35:41 PM »
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Russia says new U.S. sanctions on Iran could affect ties


Reuters, 13/08 18:04 CET


By Steve Gutterman

MOSCOW (Reuters) – Russia sharply criticised new U.S. sanctions against Iran on Monday, saying the measures to punish banks, insurance companies and shippers that help Iran sell its oil would harm Moscow’s ties with Washington if Russian firms are affected.

Russia, which has long opposed sanctions beyond those approved by the U.N. Security Council to pressure Tehran over its nuclear programme, called the measures “overt blackmail” and a “crude contradiction of international law.”

The United States ceased most trade with Iran many years ago and has put increasing pressure other countries to reduce their business with the Islamic Republic.

The measures approved by Congress on August 1 build on oil trade sanctions signed into law by Obama in December that have prompted Japan, South Korea, India and others to slash purchases of Iranian oil.

“We are talking about restrictive measures not only against Iran but also affecting foreign companies and individuals working with it, including in the hydrocarbon extraction and transport, petrochemicals, finance and insurance industries,” the Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

“We consider efforts to … impose internal American legislation on the entire world completely unacceptable,” it said. “We reject methods of overt blackmail that the United States resorts to in relation to the companies and banks of other countries.”

“Those in Washington should take into account that our bilateral relations will suffer seriously if Russian operators … come under the effects of the American restrictions,” the ministry said.

Relations between Moscow and Washington improved after President Barack Obama moved to “reset” ties early in his term, but they have been strained by disputes over Syria and President Vladimir Putin’s accusation of U.S. meddling in Russian politics.

In the statement, Russia repeated its argument that unilateral sanctions – as opposed to those approved by the Security Council, where Moscow has veto power – are counterproductive.

The “constant increase of pressure on Tehran” undermines unity among the six nations leading diplomatic efforts to rein in Iran’s nuclear programme – Russia, the United States, China, Britain, France and Germany – and hurts the chances of success.

Russia balances its role in the diplomatic attempts to ensure Tehran does not develop nuclear weapons with aid to the civilian nuclear programme in Iran, where it built a nuclear power plant that came on line this year.

Talks between Iran and the six powers in Moscow in June failed to end the standoff over Tehran’s nuclear activities including the enrichment of uranium which Western nations fear is part of a bid for weapons capability.

(Editing by Robin Pomeroy)

http://www.euronews.com/newswires/1622434-russia-says-new-us-sanctions-on-iran-could-affect-ties/

Offline Catsoo

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Re: Iran sanctions news
« Reply #454 on: August 13, 2012, 04:42:05 PM »
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Insurance plan lets India resume shipping Iran oil


India — The first Indian ship to carry Iranian crude since European sanctions on ship insurance decimated Iran's oil trade is scheduled to load up on Wednesday.

India's Mercator shipping says the tanker is contracted to carry 85,000 metric tons of crude for a government refiner.

New Delhi has been pushing government insurers to offer coverage for Indian tankers to maintain vital Iranian imports since European sanctions blocked third-party insurance in July. But the government-backed insurance only covers up to $100 million. Most Indian shipping companies say those terms aren't adequate.

Japan has been offering its shipping companies up to $7.6 billion in coverage per tanker. South Korean refiners are in talks to allow Iran to send oil on its own ships.


http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-505245_162-57492061/insurance-plan-lets-india-resume-shipping-iran-oil/

Offline Catsoo

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Re: Iran sanctions news
« Reply #455 on: August 19, 2012, 06:13:42 PM »
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Iran ‘enjoys’ windfall amid varied views on tapping into reserves

http://www.saudigazette.com.sa/index.cfm?method=home.regcon&contentid=20120819133513



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Offline 1979Change

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Re: Iran sanctions news
« Reply #456 on: August 19, 2012, 10:55:47 PM »
0

Iran ‘enjoys’ windfall amid varied views on tapping into reserves

http://www.saudigazette.com.sa/index.cfm?method=home.regcon&contentid=20120819133513



Catsoo


Despite that the oil money seems so good, money from finished products have much better effect on Iran's economy. The inflation in Iran is connected too much on the rate of exchange, which is essentially in the hand of speculators. By increasing the domestic production, Iran can burst the currency speculation bubble and kill many flies with one shot, solving unemployment, dependency on Oil, weak Rial, Oil embargo, Currency dependence etc, all can be solved with stronger domestic productions.

Now that Rial is weak and imports are expensive, is the perfect moment in time to increase domestic productions.

Offline Catsoo

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Re: Iran sanctions news
« Reply #457 on: August 20, 2012, 04:41:16 PM »
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GUILTY UNTIL PROVEN INNOCENT: EXTORTION AGAINST STANDARD CHARTERED BANK SHOWS BIAS AGAINST IRAN

 More blog posts from Danny Schechter

Monday, 20 August 2012 08:35 0 Comments
By Danny Schechter.

 

Is This Incident A Retaliation Because A Bank Official Made A Disparaging Comment About US Hostility To Iran?

Johannesburg, South Africa: On the surface, it looked like a simple game of “Gotcha,” when New York Bank regulators blew the whistle on London’s Standard Chartered Bank for laundering money. The fact that the money was allegedly tied to Iran cast a major shadow on the allegations, given the Islamic Republic’s “bad guy” image in American policy circles.

Big money was said to be involved when a NY State regulator, Benjamin Lawsky, considered a publicity seeking cowboy in banking circles, made the explosive charge that Standard Chartered bank abetted $250 billion of money-laundering transactions with Iran.

On the surface the case was open and shut and headline-making, even though other federal regulators didn’t immediately jump in with guns blazing.

Then, as Reuters reported, it all became even murkier when Britain’s Central Bank governor portrayed Lawsky as marching to his own tune, and out of step with federal regulators in Washington. "One regulator, but not the others, has gone public while the investigation is still going on,” the Bank of England's Mervyn King said at a news conference in London.”

Suddenly, the plot thickened, even as the media tide carried with it the assumption that the bank was guilty as sin. With the Regulator calling Standard Chartered a “Rogue Institution,” its shares began dropping in value. In one morning’s trading, on the basis of accusations in a press release and uncontested legal charges, the bank lost $16 billion after the unproven allegations that US. Sanctions on Iran were violated hit the presss. Bank officials initially contested the scale of the transgression indicating that only a small part of its business with Iran was involved, no more than $14 million. Federal regulators also implied that NY State was exaggerating the scale of any potential problem and that Lawsky’s language was unnecessarily “strident.”

But it is strident language that gets attention in a media that rarely bothers to investigate issues like these.

Not mentioned in the first stories was that Standard Chartered had met Lawsky’s office months earlier, but nothing was said then about any high crimes and misdemeanors.

That would change when the opportunity for a big media story materialized. Now, Lawsky was treating this case as major violation of national security, saying: "This is a case about Iran, money laundering, and national security," Lawsky said , "We will continue to work closely with our law enforcement partners, both federal and state, in this effort. No bank, big or small, foreign or domestic, is above the law."

Sounds dramatic, doesn’t it? But the British were furious because their investigation was not complete, but, whatever the truth, the perception of wrong-doing began killing the banks stock price. An auditing firm accused of fudging the numbers also adamantly denied it.

Bank critics in the US lashed out at the British regulators who criticized a lack of protocol by the NY regulator. Wrote James Kwak on BaselineScenarioo.com, a leading economics blog:

“Standard Chartered almost certainly conspired to evade U. S. sanctions? * Why are they mad at Benjamin Lawsky instead of at Standard Chartered? And when you think a violation of inter-regulator “protocol” is worse than a systematic plan to defraud the U. S. government and break sanctions against Iran, of all countries—it’s hard to imagine how you could be more captured, without knowing it.”

Is this true? No Court has agreed with the accusation, and now none will because there has now been a settlement with no admission of guilt,

Standard Chartered initially said they would fight back. CEO Peter Sands issued this statement, "(We) fundamentally reject the overall picture and believe there are no grounds for them to take this action," he told reporters. The threat to cancel the bank's license to operate in New York would be "wholly disproportionate," he said.

It turns out that the pressure to punish the bank was partly due to fury at a colorful comment allegedly made by a Standard Chartered executive who challenged the arrogance of New York regulators in a conversation way back in 2006.

Bank Executive Richard Meddings allegedly said then: "You f--- ing Americans. Who are you to tell us, the rest of the world that we're not going to deal with Iranians?”

Daring to criticize the self-righteousness of US regulators and US policy in a off the record comment (not even in a document) apparently marked the bank for retaliation by flag-waving and thin-skinned regulators.

What was Standard Chartered to do? Stand on principles and its “facts” and possibly loose its license in New York, or try to settle ---without admitting wrongdoing. At the same time, more investigations are underway in connection with its alleged violations of US sanctions laws.

What do you think happened? The bank did a quick calculation and decided to pay up rather than be shut down. They coughed up $340 million in a case that smacks of official extortion dressed up as high principles. The NY regulator has the power to close the bank if it believes the bank is untrustworthy, even if the bank is not guilty of any particular transgression. The Bank says the accusations deal with only 1% of some 60,000 Iranian wire transfers that New York regulator claims were involved.

Naked Capitalism (NC) reports that the regulator tried to shake Standard Chartered down for even more money. “The amount agreed was less than he was initially rumored to be seeking, which was in the $500 to to $700 million range. However, as we also indicated, in a “good” settlement, neither side gets what it wants. And given that the Federal authorities were roused by the New York action and are also reported to be negotiating settlements, they will likely have to secure decent dollar amounts so as not to be perceived to be completely incompetent, which would have cut into what SCB would pay to New York.”

The NC website also explains, “SCB was handling Iran’s foreign oil sale related payments.

Meanwhile in London, according to Fortune, “Money managers’ reacted to the U.S. allegations that Standard Chartered hid money tied to Iran with these words: Everyone does it.”

The U.S. business magazine added, “Talk that the bank could lose its ability to work and trade in the state is being dismissed as simply "loony."

Meanwhile, money managers in the City believe that the bank's credit looks solid and its equity value is now cheap compared to its peers – even ones that have their plates full with their own scandals ranging from the Libor fixing to insider trading. Nevertheless, the company's stock and bonds are expected to trade at a discount to its peers until the bank either resolves the issue or sets aside the cash to deal with it…It wasn't too long ago that the big European banks actually flaunted their close relationship with entities connected to Iran.”

The Guardian seemed sympathetic to Standard Chartered too, reporting that the bank called its decision “pragmatic…in the best interest of shareholders and customers".

The newspaper explained, “The loss of its banking licence would be more damaging than the fine, although Sands on Tuesday told the Business Standard paper in India – where the bank has a high street banking operation – that he did not believe the bank would be stripped of its ability to conduct business directly in the US. Ian Gordon, banks analyst at Investec, said: "It has taken the nuclear option off the table and suggests the total settlement will be manageable."

Maybe Richard Meddings was right, even though the exercise of his “freedom” of speech has proven very costly. Ironic isn’t it, that sanctions are supposedly in place to stop Iran from going nuclear, just as fact challenged regulators use the “nuclear option” to get their way.

And so it goes, another day in the world of banking where hypocrisy reigns and trillions in global money laundering are ignored. Prosecution of wrong doers are few and far between because officials get more pats on the back from their bosses for bringing in money rather than putting wrong doers in jail. A government that has dragged its feet in prosecuting crimes committed by the likes of Bank of America or Goldman Sachs has no problem going after small fry like Standard Charter to show that they are “doing something” with Iran as the pretext.

This tale of regulatory complicity feels like all the stories we read about the police shaking down the mafia so they can be cut in to the rackets.

Wall Street has become a place where real financial fraudsters go unpunished while inflated cases like this get the attention especially when a demonized “evil doer” like Iran is said to be involved. Real crimes like the way sanctions hurt ordinary Iranians go unreported.

News Dissector Danny Schechter blogs at News Dissector.net. He is the author of The Crime of Our Time about pervasive financial crime, (Disinformation Books) and directed the film Plunder on the same subject. He also hosts a show on ProgressiveRadioNetwork (PRN.fm.) This commentary first appeared on PressTV.com. Comments to dissector@mediachannel.org

http://therealnews.com/t2/component/content/article/50-danny/1216-guilty-until-proven-innocent-extortion-against-standard-chartered-bank-shows-bias-against-iran

Offline Zultra

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Re: Iran sanctions news
« Reply #458 on: August 20, 2012, 04:47:42 PM »
+2
I believe that the Sanctions are having a good effect for Iran, it's forcing it to stop being dependent on Oil and instead make it's main money earner be the Domestic Industries.

Offline Moso

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Re: Iran sanctions news
« Reply #459 on: August 21, 2012, 03:23:17 PM »
+1
This article has been all over the media today. What do people think? While I personally think Armenia should aid Iran in curtailing effects of the illegal sanctions, I doubt Armenian Government will be very open on having such banking ties because of Western pressure. But I'm sure, we will be able to conceal our business deals and banking ties so West is not on top of us. The West in general turns the other way when it comes to our deep economic relations with Iran because of our blockade on both sides, but they have still been blackmailing us about our ties with Iran (e.g. threatening to cut off aid). Though in my view, Iran is a more valuable partner than pro-Turkish US.

Quote
(Reuters) - With international sanctions squeezing Iran, the Islamic Republic is seeking to expand its banking foothold in the Caucasus nation of Armenia to make up for difficulties in countries it used to rely on to do business, according to diplomats and documents.

Iran's growing interest in its neighbor Armenia, a mountainous, landlocked country of about 3.3 million people, comes at a time of rising international isolation for Tehran and increasing scrutiny by Western governments and intelligence agencies of Iranian banking ties worldwide as they attempt to stifle the country's nuclear program.

The most recent example is British bank Standard Chartered, which has been in the spotlight due to U.S. charges that it hid from U.S. regulators and shareholders some $250 billion of transactions tied to Iran.

An expanded local-currency foothold in a neighbor like Armenia, a former Soviet republic which has close trade ties to Iran and is working hard to forge closer links to the European Union, could make it easier for Tehran to obfuscate payments to and from foreign clients and deceive Western intelligence agencies trying to prevent it from expanding its nuclear and missile programs.

Armenian officials denied illicit banking links to Iran.

While the four rounds of U.N. sanctions remain limited, with only two Iran banks blacklisted by the Security Council, the United States and European Union have implemented much tougher restrictions, sanctioning dozens of banks and other firms and making it increasingly difficult for Tehran to conduct business in U.S. dollars and euros.

A U.N. panel of experts that monitors compliance with the sanctions against Tehran recently submitted a report to the U.N. Security Council's Iran sanctions committee that concluded Iran was constantly searching for ways to skirt restrictions on its banking sector.

"One state bordering Iran informed the Panel of requests from Iran to open new financial institutions," the report said. "The requests were not pursued apparently because of that country's burdensome legislation."

Several U.N. diplomats familiar with the panel's work confirmed that the unnamed state was Armenia, where Iran already has banking ties.

Despite Armenia's denials of illegal banking arrangements, Iran has not given up trying to expand in the country, the diplomats said, and U.S. officials have repeatedly cautioned Armenian colleagues to tighten financial controls.

REPORTS AND DENIALS

Iran's trade with Armenia, including an oil pipeline that Armenian news reports say should be finished in 2014, requires some form of cross-border banking. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has said that Iran's annual trade with Armenia is around $1 billion, according to Iranian news reports.

Engaging in transactions with Iranian banks is not a violation of international sanctions as long as it is not linked to Iran's nuclear or missile programs or companies or individuals under U.S., EU or U.N. sanctions.

Iran insists its nuclear program is peaceful and refuses to shut it down. It says the sanctions are illegal.

But Washington has made clear to governments around the world that trading with Iranian firms that are sanctioned by the United States could lead to a U.S. blacklisting.

A Western intelligence report shown to Reuters, and dated May 2012, said that Iran was searching for "convenient" locations to develop alternative banking relationships away from spy agencies and other international monitoring bodies. It said an expanded presence in Armenia was one of Iran's goals.

"The Central Bank of Iran (CBI) has been operating for years to establish and develop concealed infrastructures to enable Iran to continue trading with foreign countries, particularly in countries convenient for Iranian activity, such as the UAE (United Arab Emirates) and Turkey," the report said.

"The increasing pressure on the banks in some of these countries has forced CBI economists to seek financial alternatives in countries that do not work according to the dictates of the West," it said, naming Armenia as a target.

In addition to Turkey and UAE, diplomats say Iran has been trying to develop financial channels elsewhere to avoid sanctions, focusing on countries like Malaysia, China, India, Brazil and, according to a report in the New York Times last weekend, Iraq.

Iran has used Iraqi banks to move large amounts of cash into the international banking system, prompting private U.S. protests to Baghdad, the Times reported.

Regarding Armenia, the Western intelligence report cited Armenian bank ACBA Credit Agricole Bank, a full-service institution that does business with individuals and companies and had some $574 million in assets last year, as one of Iran's principal targets.

A Western U.N. diplomat who closely follows the sanctions on Tehran confirmed that ACBA was "a bank that has come up in connection with Iran." He declined to provide details of any potentially illicit ACBA transactions linked to Iran.

Ashot Osipyan, chairman of the Union of Armenia's Banks, said it was impossible ACBA had any ties with Iran. "Armenian banks are financing only Armenia's economy," he said.

ACBA Chief Executive Officer Stepan Gishian was similarly categorical in his denial of helping Iran skirt sanctions.

"We finance exclusively the economy of Armenia," he said. "We don't have any relationship with Iran. We never have, we don't now and furthermore we don't plan on becoming a channel for financing Iran. What you're saying is complete nonsense."

Washington recently raised its concerns with Armenian officials about the possibility that Iran could exploit Armenia to bypass sanctions. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton discussed the issue with President Serzh Sargsyan during a June meeting in Yerevan, a senior State Department official said.

The precise content of the discussions and the outcome were unclear.

CLAMP DOWN

Diplomats and intelligence officials told Reuters that Turkey and the UAE remain Iran's principal banking connections, while China and India are becoming areas of concern as Tehran now finds it difficult to conduct transactions in U.S. dollars and euros. As a result, it has turned increasingly to doing business in less-traceable local currencies.

But Turkey and the UAE, they say, are not as welcoming these days. The two countries are under intense pressure from Washington and the European Union to clamp down on illicit Iranian commerce connected to a nuclear program that the Western powers and their allies suspect is for producing weapons - a charge Iran denies.

Another bank that has long concerned Western powers is the Armenian branch of Iran's Bank Mellat, which has been under U.S. sanctions since 2007. While Mellat is not under U.N. sanctions, the Security Council cited it as a problematic bank in the text of its fourth sanctions resolution, passed in June 2010.

"Over the last seven years, Bank Mellat has facilitated hundreds of millions of dollars in transactions for Iranian nuclear, missile, and defense entities," the resolution said.

Mellat is still functioning in Yerevan, though its activities have drastically decreased due to U.S. and EU sanctions, according to Arakel Meliksetyan, deputy head of the financial intelligence unit at Armenia's central bank.

Meliksetyan, citing the bank's annual published reports, said its Armenian assets decreased more than 50 percent from December 31, 2010 to July 1, 2012.

Mellat is cut off from the U.S., European and other financial markets and has virtually no business with other Armenian banks, Meliksetyan said. Since it was disconnected from the SWIFT system earlier this year, Mellat Armenia is no longer able to send or receive international wire transfers, he added.

He said the bank's small customers were mainly Iranians doing business in Armenia, Armenians exporting to Iran, Iranians with Armenian backgrounds and students.

The Mellat Armenian branch's website (www.mellatbank.am) has photos of a brightly lit, ordinary-looking bank with the words "Accuracy, Courtesy, Efficiency" at the top. It lists two men with Iranian names as the general manager and deputy general manager and gives a P.O. box for an address.

Reuters contacted the bank for responses to questions about its activities. After initially agreeing to a face-to-face discussion, the officials said they wanted written questions and have not provided further comment.

Turkey was in a similar position to Armenia's once. Reuters reported in 2010 that Turkey was becoming a safe haven for Iranian banks. In response to heavy U.S. pressure to cut banking ties with Tehran, Western envoys say, Turkish banks have become much more cautious about doing business with Iranian clients.

U.S. concerns about Armenia's commitment to implementing sanctions against Iranian banks are not new, according to previously secret U.S. diplomatic cables published by WikiLeaks.

A May 2007 cable from the U.S. embassy in Yerevan, entitled "Armenia Slow To Implement Bank Sepah Asset Freeze," said that Sepah, an Iranian bank which has been under U.N. sanctions since March 2007, maintained correspondent accounts with the Armenian branch of Mellat in breach of U.N. restrictions.

Another cable from 2008 made clear Washington was still worried: "Poloff (Political Office) requested that the Armenian MFA (ministry of foreign affairs) advise the Central Bank of Armenia to employ extra vigilance in monitoring the financial transaction of the Iranian owned Bank Mellat in Yerevan."

(Additional reporting by Thomas Grove, Steve Gutterman and Nastassia Astrasheuskaya in Moscow, Andrew Quinn in Washington, Hasmik Mkrtchyan in Yerevan and Andrei Makhovsky in Minsk. Editing by Warren Strobel and Jim Loney)


http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/08/21/us-iran-sanctions-armenia-idUSBRE87K05420120821
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Offline 1979Change

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Re: Iran sanctions news
« Reply #460 on: August 21, 2012, 03:45:40 PM »
+1
This article has been all over the media today. What do people think? While I personally think Armenia should aid Iran in curtailing effects of the illegal sanctions, I doubt Armenian Government will be very open on having such banking ties because of Western pressure. But I'm sure, we will be able to conceal our business deals and banking ties so West is not on top of us. The West in general turns the other way when it comes to our deep economic relations with Iran because of our blockade on both sides, but they have still been blackmailing us about our ties with Iran (e.g. threatening to cut off aid). Though in my view, Iran is a more valuable partner than pro-Turkish US.

http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/08/21/us-iran-sanctions-armenia-idUSBRE87K05420120821


West is mad and accuses every single country that has normal relationship with Iran to break the sanctions. here is another one that accuses Iraq.


"U.S. Says Iraqis Are Helping Iran to Skirt Sanctions"
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/08/19/world/middleeast/us-says-iraqis-are-helping-iran-skirt-sanctions.html?_r=1&emc=na


Soon Iran will be the chair of NAM. Iran should suggest an alternative to SWIFT, the wiring and inter-bank transaction system ; so these bastards cannot spy on all countries.

Offline Catsoo

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Re: Iran sanctions news
« Reply #461 on: August 22, 2012, 01:51:11 PM »
0
Asia’s Imports Of Iran Crude To Regain Levels Prior To EU Ban




South Korea to halt Iran oil exports

Imports to recover as S. Korea, Japan to step up purchases; May rise back to levels before European Union ban kicked in; Shipments recover as Asian buyers work around EU embargo

August 22, 2012 5:40 by Reuters

Asia’s crude imports from Iran are set to recover in September to levels reached before a July 1 insurance ban by the European Union plunged trade with the Islamic Republic into uncertainty not seen in decades.

 

Top Asian buyers — China, India, Japan and South Korea together take more than half of Iran’s crude oil exports — have worked around the European Union embargo, suggesting imports will stay at least around these levels for the rest of the year.

 

Refiners want to continue using the Iranian crude many of their plants are configured to process, as changes will need lengthy testing of new grades or cause an alteration in output.

 

“Iran was part of the staple diet,” said Sushant Gupta of energy consultancy firm Wood Mackenzie.

 

“The refiners would want to keep their crude slate intact if they can as long as the economics works. We do see a recovery in Iranian crude imports into Asia in the fourth quarter.”

 

The United States, the European Union, and other Western nations want to stop Iran’s suspected pursuit of nuclear weapons using toughened sanctions on oil exports, a major source of income. Tehran says its nuclear program is peaceful.

 

The European Union insurance ban threw the decades-old oil shipping and trading system into disarray. EU insurers underwrite most maritime shipping, and insurers elsewhere have been unable to offer cover for the billions of dollars in claims that could stem from a spill.

 

The European Union ban halved Iran’s exports to top Asian buyers in July from June’s figure of 1.28 million barrels per day (bpd), sending buyers scrambling to work around the measure.

 

SOUTH KOREA, JAPAN

 

The recovery in September will be driven by Japan and South Korea, Iran’s third- and fourth-biggest oil buyers respectively. After a two-month gap, South Korea will resume imports of up to 200,000 bpd from September.

 

Japan is also resuming imports after completely halting shipments in July. It is loading about 226,000 bpd in August, more than double the amount loaded in July. Oil usually takes around three weeks to journey from Iran to Japan, so these cargoes will be accounted as imports in August or September.

 

If Japan lifts around the same volume in September as it plans for August, the two will help Iranian shipments to Asia’s top buyers rise close to 1 million bpd from 656,300 bpd in July, when only India and China imported from the Islamic Republic.

 

In all, Iran’s crude exports dropped to about 1.1 million bpd in June and July from more than 2 million bpd at the start of the year, sources said. At current prices, that cut meant the loss of about $100 million a day in earnings for Iran.

 

Besides Japan and South Korea, Mangalore Refinery & Petrochemicals Ltd., India’s biggest state-owned buyer of Iranian oil, expects shipments to recover from October after it completes a facility that allows the use of bigger vessels. The company’s loading plan for September is still not known, but it plans to lift about 2 million barrels in August.

 

Indian Oil Corp., the country’s biggest oil refiner, also aims to lift a cargo in September. It had last imported Iranian oil in May.

 

Taiwan, a smaller buyer with just 22,000 bpd, also aims to resume buying from Tehran in September after a gap of six months.

 

LOWER THAN LAST YEAR

 

Still, the recovery will not return Iran’s exports to last year’s levels, as buyers have to ensure they have cut shipments sufficiently to stay eligible for a waiver from the sanctions imposed by the United States. Washington has given waivers to the top four Asian buyers that come up for renewal later this year.

 

Even after the resumption, Japan’s purchases will be about 25 percent lower than a year ago, while those by South Korea will about 20 percent less. Though India’s MRPL is able to raise imports because of its new facility, it plans to cut shipments by 20 percent this year.

 

China, Iran’s top oil customer and trading partner, has nominated full contract volumes of Iranian crude for loading this month, at just over 16 million barrels. It may stick to a similar lifting plan for September as its imports in the first seven months were down 22 percent from a year ago.

 

“Imports will not rise back to the pre-crisis levels,” said Gupta at Wood Mackenzie. “But we expect to see a recovery, unless there are some fresh sanctions announced.”

 

South Korea joined its Chinese counterparts by asking Iran to deliver crude on Iranian tankers, government and industry sources said. This shifts to Tehran the responsibility for insurance, sidestepping the EU ban.

 

Indian refiners have adopted a twin plan to deal with the insurance issue. They are seeking government approval to ask Tehran to deliver the oil, and are trying to use limited cover from state-run insurers for locally-owned tankers to ship it.

 

Iran has a major interest in keeping its crude flowing to South Korea, China, India and Japan because they are its top four customers, taking more than half of its oil exports.

 

Japanese refiners have secured government-backed insurance cover for locally owned tankers to ship Iranian crude. (Additional reporting by Osamu Tsukimori in Tokyo, Chen Aizhu and Judy Hua in Beijing, Florence Tan, Lee Yen Nee and Elizabeth Law; Writing by Manash Goswami; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)

http://www.kippreport.com/2012/08/asias-imports-of-iran-crude-to-regain-levels-prior-to-eu-ban/

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Re: Iran sanctions news
« Reply #462 on: August 25, 2012, 05:32:59 PM »
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South Africa protests to EU over Iran sanctions    



Economic Desk



South Africa will discuss the impacts of Western-led imposing sanction on Iran with Europe, an international relations official said.
 
"Regarding the issue of oil sanctions against Iran, we have agreed to send an inter-departmental delegation to Brussels to discuss the impact of the application of EU sanctions on Iran, on South Africa and the rest of the Southern African region," International Relations Minister Maite Nkoana-Mashabane told reporters in Pretoria.
 
She was speaking after a meeting with European Union (EU) foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton.
A South African official has said recently that the U.S. and EU imposed sanctions against Iran are going to impact the South African economy by disrupting its fuel supplies.
 
"The sanctions are not just going to impact the South African economy, but it is also going to impact that of our neighbors," Nelisiwe Magubane, director general at the energy department, said.
 
Any disruption to crude imports could hit fuel supplies in South Africa, which has suffered shortages in the last year because of strikes and refinery problems, she said.
 
Magubane said South Africa will be looking to the African continent to source oil to replace supplies from Iran.
 
"We intend looking at other countries, specifically in Africa, mainly Angola and Nigeria," she said, adding that Saudi Arabia would also be another source of oil.
 
South Africa used to import about one third of its crude oil from Iran. 
 
The EU sanctions against Iran remains a hurdle for South Africa. These sanctions include a ban on the provision of insurance and reinsurance by EU insurers to Iran and Iranian owned companies. The EU also bans new contracts on imports of petroleum and petroleum products from Iran and demands an end to existing contracts by July 1.
 
"Unlike the U. S., the EU legislation does not give provision for any exception. Although the U. S. granted the exception, the EU sanctions will make it impossible for importation of crude oil from Iran due to the ban on the provision of insurance and reinsurance by EU insurers to the State of Iran and Iranian owned companies," the department of energy said on Thursday.
 
The South African government is actively negotiating with the EU to remove the hurdle.
 
Magubane said she expected a "breakthrough" soon in talks with Europe on the issue.

http://www.tehrantimes.com/component/content/article/100803

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Re: Iran sanctions news
« Reply #463 on: August 26, 2012, 03:59:22 AM »
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Iranian-Canadians protest in front of TD Bank


Published 12 minutes ago





TARA WALTON/TORONTO STAR Iranian-Canadians protest outside a TD Canada Trust building at Yonge St. and Finch Ave. Saturday. The protest was called over the bank's decision earlier in the summer to close some accounts of Iranian-Canadians due to economic sanctions against Iran.

Katherine Fernandez-Blance
Staff Reporter

It was the first Toronto protest held in response to TD Bank Group’s decision to close the accounts of its Iranian customers, but, organizers agree, it likely won’t be the last.

More than 40 people gathered Saturday afternoon outside the TD Bank building at Yonge St. and Finch Ave., holding signs, circulating a petition, and listening to speeches in Farsi and English.

The message was clear: don’t treat Iranian-Canadians like second-class citizens.

In May, Iranian-Canadians across the country received notice from TD Bank Group that their accounts would be closed as a result of Canada’s economic sanctions against Iran.

Niaz Salimi, one of the protest’s organizers, said many of those affected are new immigrants fleeing the Iranian government, and that they are afraid to publicly criticize TD’s actions.

Although Salimi doesn’t bank with TD herself, she was protesting the manner in which the bank informed customers that their accounts would be closed. The customers should have been informed in person, and the bank should have given Iranian-Canadians a proper explanation for the closures, she said.

“We are asking for a proper due process; not humiliating people, not giving them a hard time, and trying to understand that this is a country built and occupied by immigrants,” Salimi said.

Earlier this month, Iranian-Canadians ran into trouble again when trying to set up a charitable account to raise funds for those affected by an earthquake in northwest Iran. They were allegedly told that, because of the economic sanctions against Iran, they would not be able to open an account. Instead, they were told they could donate to humanitarian relief organizations, although in most cases would not be able to specify that the money go to Iran.

Richmond Hill MPP Reza Moridi attended the protest briefly to show his support.

Moridi, who is himself of Iranian background, said when he learned about the account closures he sent a letter to the bank’s CEO and had a conversation with its vice-president. TD was not acting in the way the sanctions intended, he said.

“Our federal government has to explain the measures they have taken in terms of sanctions against the Iranian government clearly to the banks and to our financial institutions,” Moridi said. “They’re not supposed to close down the back accounts of ordinary Iranian-Canadians.”

A few security guards were present for the duration of the protest, though the event was peaceful.

In the first half-hour, three men walked past separately and muttered racist remarks.

“You get people who are just disrespectful or nonunderstanding of different causes or issues, and all you can really do is turn a blind eye almost to it and keep doing what you think is right,” said Ieta Shams, one of the youngest protestors at the event.

Shams, 17, is a first-generation Canadian whose parents came to Canada as Iranian refugees. She attended the protest in the hope that TD will reverse its decision on the account closures.

TD Bank representatives were unavailable for comment, but in a July 19 statement the bank said the account closures were not targeted, but were made in accordance with federal regulations. Under Canada’s Special Economic Measures (Iran) Regulations, passed in 2010, Canadian financial institutions are forbidden from providing financial services to anyone in Iran or for the benefit of Iran.


http://www.thestar.com/news/gta/article/1247250--iranian-canadians-protest-in-front-of-td-bank

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Re: Iran sanctions news
« Reply #464 on: August 26, 2012, 08:57:52 AM »
0

It's interesting to see a country such as canada that was self proclaimed as "tolerant country" to impose such racist actions against its citizens. I grew up in the area for a few years, my parents decided to leave the country since they didn't wanted their children to get a proper education.

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Re: Iran sanctions news
« Reply #465 on: August 26, 2012, 09:13:15 AM »
+1
TD Bank Issues Counterfeit Money Without A Refund: Report


http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/06/04/td-bank-counterfeit-bills_n_1567745.html

what a bunch of banksters..

« Last Edit: August 26, 2012, 09:17:27 AM by kaman »

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Re: Iran sanctions news
« Reply #466 on: August 26, 2012, 04:17:27 PM »
+1
Asia imports of Iran crude to regain levels prior to EU ban


248 times viewed.
Sunday, 26 Aug 2012


Reuters reported that Asia's crude imports from Iran are set to recover in September to levels reached before a July 1st 2012 insurance ban by the European Union plunged trade with the Islamic Republic into uncertainty not seen in decades.

Top Asian buyers China, India, Japan and South Korea together take more than half of Iran's crude oil exports have worked around the European Union embargo, suggesting imports will stay at least around these levels for the rest of the year. Refiners want to continue using the Iranian crude many of their plants are configured to process, as changes will need lengthy testing of new grades or cause an alteration in output.

Mr Sushant Gupta of energy consultancy firm Wood Mackenzie said that "Iran was part of the staple diet. The refiners would want to keep their crude slate intact if they can as long as the economics works. We do see a recovery in Iranian crude imports into Asia in the fourth quarter."

The recovery in September will be driven by Japan and South Korea, Iran's third and fourth biggest oil buyers respectively. After 2 month gap, South Korea will resume imports of up to 200,000 barrel per day from September.

Japan is also resuming imports after completely halting shipments in July. It is loading about 226,000 barrels per day in August more than double the amount loaded in July. Oil usually takes around three weeks to journey from Iran to Japan, so these cargoes will be accounted as imports in August or September.

If Japan lifts around the same volume in September as it plans for August, the 2 will help Iranian shipments to Asia's top buyers rise close to 1 million barrels per day from 656,300 barrels per day in July when only India and China imported from the Islamic Republic.

Besides Japan and South Korea, Mangalore Refinery & Petrochemicals Limited, India's biggest state owned buyer of Iranian oil expects shipments to recover from October after it completes a facility that allows the use of bigger vessels. The company's loading plan for September is still not known but it plans to lift about 2 million barrels in August.

Indian Oil Corporation also aims to lift a cargo in September. It had last imported Iranian oil in May. Taiwan, a smaller buyer with just 22,000 barrels per day also aims to resume buying from Tehran in September after a gap of 6 months.

China, Iran's top oil customer and trading partner has nominated full contract volumes of Iranian crude for loading this month at just over 16 million barrels. It may stick to a similar lifting plan for September as its imports in the first seven months were down 22% from a year ago.

South Korea joined its Chinese counterparts by asking Iran to deliver crude on Iranian tankers, government and industry sources said. This shifts to Tehran the responsibility for insurance, sidestepping the EU ban.

Indian refiners have adopted a twin plan to deal with the insurance issue. They are seeking government approval to ask Tehran to deliver the oil and are trying to use limited cover from state run insurers for locally owned tankers to ship it.

Iran has a major interest in keeping its crude flowing to South Korea, China, India and Japan because they are its top four customers, taking more than half of its oil exports. Japanese refiners have secured government backed insurance cover for locally owned tankers to ship Iranian crude.

http://www.steelguru.com/middle_east_news/Asia_imports_of_Iran_crude_to_regain_levels_prior_to_EU_ban/280356.html

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Re: Iran sanctions news
« Reply #467 on: September 06, 2012, 05:05:05 PM »
0
Report: 2012 Iran Sanctions

By: Public Affairs Alliance of Iranian Americans

August 2012




http://www.paaia.org/CMS/Data/Sites/1/PDFs/Iran%20Sanctions%20Report%202012.pdf


This report contains lots of good information aside from the debate if this organization is pro sanctions or pro attacks which the organization has denied . Never the less it is a good read!

Their letter to their critics is published here:

http://www.****.***/news/12/sep/1052.html


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Re: Iran sanctions news
« Reply #468 on: September 06, 2012, 05:09:50 PM »
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In Iran, sanctions take toll on the sick

Vahid Salemi/AP - A patient lies for her heart scan at the Shariati hospital, in Tehran, Iran.


By Najmeh Bozorgmehr, Published: September 4

TEHRAN — The tightening of U.S. banking sanctions against Iran over its nuclear program has had an impact on all sectors of the economy but is increasingly hitting vulnerable medical patients as deliveries of medicine and raw materials for Iranian pharmaceutical companies are either stopped or delayed, according to medical experts.

The effect, the experts say, is being felt by cancer patients and those being treated for complex disorders such as hemophilia, multiple sclerosis and thalassemia, as well as transplant and kidney dialysis patients, none of whom can afford interruptions or delays in medical supplies.

Anup Kaphle SEP 5


Will Englund 9:00 AM ET

Olga Khazan 10:30 AM ET

The country has a history of naming shops after the dictator.

Milad, an 8-year-old Iranian boy suffering from severe hemophilia, lives in Kuhdasht, a town 400 miles southwest of Tehran, and relies on injections of a U.S.-made treatment, Feiba, which is no longer available locally in large enough quantities.

His parents took him on the 12-hour bus journey to the capital hoping to find supplies of the vital medicine but were given enough for only two days. The boy is now at risk of losing the use of his right leg and is suffering continuous nose bleeds that could be life-threatening.

“I am really worried. My son’s life is at risk,” said Afsaneh, his mother. She says she does not know which countries have imposed sanctions on Iran but believes “no human beings can be so brutal to patients.”

The government of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad says international sanctions have had little impact on the country and insists that its nuclear program should continue. It has launched a public relations campaign stressing that 97 percent of Iran’s medicine is produced domestically — a clear attempt to prevent panic that medical supplies could be at risk.

However, Ahmad Ghavidel, head of the Iranian Hemophilia Society, a nongovernmental organization that assists about 8,000 patients, says access to medicine has become increasingly limited and claims one young man recently died in southern Iran after an accident when the blood-clotting injection he needed was not available.

“This is a blatant hostage-taking of the most vulnerable people by countries which claim they care about human rights,” Ghavidel said. “Even a few days of delay can have serious consequences like hemorrhage and disability.”

Health analysts say that although the volume of imports affected may be small in percentage terms, the products that are involved are vital for chronic diseases for which domestically produced replacements either do not exist or are not as effective.

Iran’s pharmaceutical factories are said by health analysts and medical importers to be dependent on imports from Western countries, as well as China and India, for more than half of their raw materials.

The U.S. Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) has made “the commercial exportation or re-exportation of food and medicine to Iran . . . subject to licensing requirements,” while most goods and technologies in other sectors are banned.

However, even those with a license report problems. Importers say that despite resorting to various more expensive financial channels, such as changing from one European bank to another or using middlemen and unofficial transactions, medicine does not arrive on time or in sufficient quantities.

“We hold a license from the OFAC, but our imports have dropped by more than half while we pay much more than before,” one importer said.

“The exemption of medicine from sanctions is only in theory,” said another. “International banks do not accept Iran’s money for fear of facing U.S. punishment.”

Hengameh Ebrahim-Zadeh, of the Tehran Province Thalassemia Association, an NGO, says patients — estimated to number about 20,000 across the country — now receive enough medicine to cover just a few days of their monthly needs.

She said she knows of four deaths in Tehran over the past month that were a result of the shortage of medicine for thalassemia patients.

Kidney dialysis and transplant patients suffer from similar problems. Daryoush Arman, an adviser to the Iran Charity Association to Support Kidney Patients, an NGO that helps about 65,000 people, said those patients who are prescribed imported medicine by their doctors are struggling. However, he added, “the biggest challenge” lies ahead, as a shortage of dialysis and transplant equipment is likely to worsen.

Many Iranians fear they will face similar shortages for treatments of more common diseases when stocks of medicines are depleted.

But for Afsaneh, Milad’s mother, the concern is more immediate as she keeps an eye on her son’s leg. “His right leg has become softer since this morning thanks to the injection,” she says. “I have to go back to the pharmacy tomorrow to see if I can get more Feiba. Milad’s life is bound to Feiba.”

http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/middle_east/sanctions-take-toll-on-irans-sick/2012/09/04/ce07ee2c-f6b2-11e1-8253-3f495ae70650_story.html

Offline bache narmek

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Re: Iran sanctions news
« Reply #469 on: September 15, 2012, 08:52:25 AM »
-1
I read today that the Netherlands, Japan and 9 other EU countries can trade with Iran again. What happend that the USA allows that?

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Re: Iran sanctions news
« Reply #470 on: September 15, 2012, 09:08:35 AM »
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I read today that the Netherlands, Japan and 9 other EU countries can trade with Iran again. What happend that the USA allows that?

could you provide a source?

regards

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Re: Iran sanctions news
« Reply #471 on: September 15, 2012, 09:27:57 AM »
-1
could you provide a source?

regards


http://www.trouw.nl/tr/nl/4504/Economie/article/detail/3316661/2012/09/14/Nederland-ontkomt-aan-sancties-van-VS-voor-Iraanse-olie.dhtml

It's in dutch but if you translate it into english it's pretty accurate. It's coverd by manny news agencies.

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Re: Iran sanctions news
« Reply #472 on: September 15, 2012, 09:32:31 AM »
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Thanks bacheh namak.
I don't see any change in policy. also why would iran resume busienss with Euroepan slaves?

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Re: Iran sanctions news
« Reply #473 on: September 15, 2012, 09:42:52 AM »
-2
yes you are right. It shows the sanctions are hurting them more instead of Iran.

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Re: Iran sanctions news
« Reply #474 on: September 15, 2012, 02:19:59 PM »
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11 countries have asked the US to be exempted from the US sanctions and they have been permitted.

catsoo

 

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