China's central bank tells banks to stop doing business with North Korea: sources
21
September, 2017
BEIJING/HONG
KONG (Reuters) - China’s central bank has told banks to strictly
implement United Nations sanctions against North Korea, four sources
told Reuters, amid U.S. concerns that Beijing has not been tough
enough over Pyongyang’s repeated nuclear tests.
Tensions
between the United States and North Korea have ratcheted up after the
sixth and most powerful nuclear test conducted by Pyongyang on Sept.
3 prompted the United Nations Security Council to impose further
sanctions last week.
Chinese
banks have come under scrutiny for their role as a conduit for funds
flowing to and from China’s increasingly isolated neighbor.
The
sources said banks were told to stop providing financial services to
new North Korean customers and to wind down loans with existing
customers, following tighter sanctions against Pyongyang by the
United Nations.
The
sources said lenders were asked to fully implement United Nations
sanctions against North Korea and were warned of the economic losses
and reputational risks if they did not do so.
Chinese
banks received the document on Monday, the sources said.
China’s
central bank did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
“At
present, management of North Korea-related business has become an
issue of national-level politics and national security,” according
to the document seen by the sources.
The
document directed banks to explain to any North Korean customers that
“our bank is fulfilling our international obligations and
implementing United Nations sanctions against North Korea. As such,
we refuse to handle any individual loans connected to North Korea.”
The
document did not specify whether existing North Korean account
holders could still deposit or remove money from their accounts.
U.S.
President Donald Trump ordered new sanctions on Thursday that open
the door wider to blacklisting people and entities doing business
with North Korea, including its shipping and trade networks, further
tightening the screws on Pyongyang’s nuclear and missile program.
Trump
stopped short of going after North Korea’s biggest trading partner,
China, and praised its central bank for ordering Chinese banks to
stop doing business with North Korea.
Frustrated
that China had not done more to rein in North Korea, the Trump
administration considered new sanctions in July on small Chinese
banks and other firms doing business with Pyongyang, two senior U.S.
officials told Reuters.
China’s
Big Four state-owned banks have stopped providing financial services
to new North Korean clients, Reuters reported last week, with some
measures beginning as early as the end of last year.
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