Murder of Honduran reporter blamed on drug gangs

A journalist reads a local paper with a photograph of fellow journalist Alfredo Villatoro outside a funeral home where a wake for Villatoro was taking place in Tegucigalpa May 16, 2017. REUTERS/Jorge Cabrera


TEGUCIGALPA |
Wed May 16, 2012 6:17pm EDT

(Reuters) – A prominent Honduran radio journalist was killed by drug gangs in retaliation for a government crackdown on cartels, the country’s security minister said on Wednesday.

Alfredo Villatoro, a well-known media personality, was found shot in the head on Tuesday a week after being kidnapped, the latest attack on the media in the violent Central American nation.

The attack on Villatoro comes as police have stepped up arrests of traffickers and prosecutors have pushed for extraditions

“(Drug gangs) are trying to frighten Honduran society,” said Security Minister Pompeyo Bonilla in a statement to a local television station.

Honduras has the world’s highest murder rate – more than 80 homicides per 100,000 inhabitants last year – as the isthmus nation is increasingly used as a transit route for cocaine moving from South America to the United States.

Villatoro was a director of HRN radio, one of the oldest broadcast stations in the country. He is the second reporter killed this month after journalist and gay-rights activist Erick Martinez was murdered last week.

Four other broadcast journalists were murdered last year, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists.

Last month, gunmen fired at the home and car of two television reporters, though no one was killed.

“We believe this is a message from organized crime. The government must take responsibility and stop this killing spree,” Carlos Ortiz, president of the Honduran Press Association said.

Mexican drug cartels have become more active in Central America in recent years and are blamed for much of the violence.

Lawmakers last year approved legislation that allows the extradition of suspected criminals wanted abroad, particularly in the United States.

(Reporting by Gustavo Palencia, Writing by Patrick Rucker; Editing by Jackie Frank)


Reuters: World News

Mladic taunts survivors at start of genocide trial

Former Bosnian Serb army commander Ratko Mladic attends his trial at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) at The Hague May 16, 2012. Mladic, 70, appeared on Wednesday for his genocide trial looking confident, flashing a thumbs-up and clapping his hands as he entered the courtroom. REUTERS/Toussaint Kluiters/Pool


THE HAGUE |
Wed May 16, 2012 1:00pm EDT

(Reuters) – Bosnian Serb general Ratko Mladic made a throat-slitting gesture to a woman who lost her son, husband and brothers in the Srebenica massacre at the start of his trial on Wednesday for some of the worst atrocities in Europe since World War Two.

Mladic, now 70, flashed a defiant thumbs-up as he entered the courtroom – the last of the main protagonists in the Balkan wars of the 1990s to go on trial at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia in The Hague.

A hero to Serb nationalists, the “Butcher of Bosnia” to his Muslim and Croat victims, the pugnacious general eluded justice for 16 years until his capture in a cousin’s farmhouse in Serbia last May.

The list of 11 charges stemming from his actions as the Serb military commander in the Bosnian war of 1992-95 ranges from genocide to murder, acts of terror and crimes against humanity.

He is accused of orchestrating not only the week-long massacre of 8,000 unarmed Muslim men and boys in Srebrenica but also the 43-month siege of the Bosnian capital Sarajevo, in which more than 10,000 people were killed by snipers, machine guns and heavy artillery.

Mladic, who refused to enter a plea, cuts a much frailer figure now than his bullish, strutting wartime persona – his defense lawyer said he had suffered three strokes and a heart attack. But he appears to have lost none of his defiance.

In the public gallery, Munira Subasic, whose 18-year-old son, husband and brothers were killed in Srebrenica, stared at him from behind a glass barrier, crossing her wrists to imitate handcuffs.

Mladic stared back and drew a hand across his throat. Presiding judge Alphons Orie promptly called a brief recess and ordered an end to “inappropriate interactions.”

“I thought I would see at least some remorse in his eyes when I came here,” Subasic said. “But instead I saw his bloodthirstiness. I don’t know how he can live with what he did, with killing so many people.”

BROADCAST IN SARAJEVO

The proceedings were broadcast live on big screens in Sarajevo, where thousands were killed by snipers or artillery while queuing for water or bread, or crossing the street.

Hasna Hadzic, a pensioner who survived the siege, stopped off on her way from the market, visibly shaken.

“I feel like crying when I think of what he has done to us: killed 8,000 in Srebrenica alone, killed people in Foca, Visegrad, our children in Sarajevo,” she said, wiping away tears.

“They shouldn’t have put him on trial. They should have liquidated him immediately.”

But in Pale, the mountain stronghold from which Serb forces orchestrated the siege and bombardment of the capital 16 km away, applause broke out in cafes every time Mladic appeared on the television screens.

“Crimes were committed by all sides,” said Serb student Mladen Mancic. “This is just an honorable man who defended the Serb people. If it wasn’t for him we wouldn’t be here today.”

Mladic was in command of the Bosnian Serb army when, over several days in July 1995, Serb fighters attacked the Srebrenica enclave in eastern Bosnia, theoretically under the protection of Dutch U.N. peacekeepers.

Video footage shot at the time showed Mladic mingling with Muslim prisoners. Shortly afterwards, the men and boys were separated from the women, stripped of identification, and shot.

Prosecutor Dermot Groome, beginning a two-day opening statement, said Mladic and other Bosnian Serbs had been implementing a grand plan to eliminate non-Serbs from large areas of Serbia, Bosnia and Croatia.

“The prosecution will present evidence that will show beyond a reasonable doubt the hand of Mr Mladic in each of these crimes,” he said.

FOOTAGE OF SIEGE

Bosnian Muslim leader Bakir Izetbegovic said he hoped the trial could at least start closing a gulf between Bosnia’s Serb and Croat-Muslim halves that shows little sign of closing, 17 years after the war ended.

“Half of Bosnia was cleansed of non-Serbs … They wanted to erase all traces and evidence of the existence of others from this part of the territory, and under the command of Ratko Mladic they succeeded,” he said.

“Many people in Bosnia are still not ready, 16 years after the war ended, to face the truth … This is the first step in the process of reconciliation.”

In court, prosecutors screened footage of bodies piled up on the streets of Sarajevo and people running in terror from the Serb onslaught.

“There can be no doubt that Mladic controlled the shelling of Sarajevo,” Groome said.

“Mladic participated in a campaign of sniping and shelling against the besieged city of Sarajevo in order to spread terror among its civilian population.”

Mladic is also held responsible for the imprisonment of non-Serbs in a system of camps, including Omarska, Prijedor and Keraterm, where they were raped, abused and murdered.

The horrors of Sarajevo and Srebrenica eventually galvanized world opinion in support of the campaign of Western air strikes on Bosnian Serb targets that brought the conflict to an end.

Mladic was indicted in 1995 along with Radovan Karadzic, the Bosnian Serbs’ political leader, who is also on trial in The Hague. Yet both remained free in Serbia for more than a decade before being tracked down.

Mladic has dismissed the charges as “monstrous” and says he is too ill to endure a trial that may last two years or more. At the end of the hearing he looked tired and was given medication.

Some victims fear that time and failing health could help him avoid judgment like his mentor Slobodan Milosevic, the architect of the Balkan wars, who died in detention in 2006 – a few months before a verdict in his trial for genocide and other war crimes in Croatia, Bosnia and Kosovo.

Defense lawyer Branko Lukic said that after his strokes and heart attack, Mladic “will never be ok”, but that his health had been improving thanks to treatment in detention.

The prosecution case alone is projected to last 200 hours, with testimony from 411 witnesses, and defense lawyers say they have not had have enough time to review the huge case file.

The judges said on Wednesday that prosecutors had made “very significant errors” in disclosure of evidence, and that they would consider giving the defense more time.

(Additional reporting by Daria Sito-Sucic and Maja Zuvela in Bosnia; Editing by Kevin Liffey)


Reuters: World News

Syria’s Assad: Nations who “sow chaos” will suffer

Members of the United Nations observer mission in Syria are seen between destroyed houses in Sermeen, near the northern city of Idlib, May 15, 2012. Picture taken May 15, 2012. REUTERS/Shaam News Network/Handout


AMMAN |
Wed May 16, 2012 1:32pm EDT

(Reuters) – Syrian President Bashar al-Assad said on Wednesday that countries trying to “sow chaos” in Syria could be infected with it themselves, an apparent warning to Arab Gulf nations that back the insurgency aimed at forcing him from power.

Assad’s remarks, to a Russian TV channel, came after U.N. staff monitoring an increasingly shaky ceasefire were caught up in an attack that killed at least 21 people, and had to spend a night with rebel forces.

The stranding of the observers and new claims of a massacre by Assad’s security forces underscored the relentlessness of the violence that continues to rage 14 months into mass protests and an insurrection against the Syrian strongman.

Assad said countries hostile to him and his government that may have believed he would follow in the footsteps of four Arab leaders ousted after popular protests now knew better.

“For the leaders of these countries, it’s becoming clear that this is not ‘Spring’ but chaos, and as I have said, if you sow chaos in Syria you may be infected by it yourself, and they understand this perfectly well,” he told Russia’s Rossiya-24 TV channel.

Assad’s government has repeatedly accused foreign states of backing a “terrorist” campaign in Syria, an apparent reference to Gulf powers Saudi Arabia and Qatar which have argued that Syrian insurgents should be supplied with weapons.

Those accusations have grown louder following a series of bomb attacks on security and military installations in Damascus and other cites that Syria calls proof of a “terrorist” conspiracy.

However, the opposition says the state itself organized the attacks in a cynical attempt to discredit the uprising against Assad.

Rebel fighters are largely drawn from Syria’s Sunni Muslim majority, and the uprising has taken on a sectarian tone that emphasizes Assad’s status as a member of the Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shi’ite Islam.

Shi’ism is the dominant sect of his ally Iran whose influence the Sunni-led Gulf Arab states seek to check.

In the same interview, Assad said Western sanctions were affecting his country – which has had to scramble to import grains and other staples – but that Syria still had a “wonderful relationship” with non-Western countries.

Russia is one of its few allies.

U.N. MONITORS CAUGHT UP IN FUNERAL ATTACK

Six ceasefire monitors caught in the crossfire of Syria’s conflict were handed back to their U.N. colleagues by rebels in the northern province of Idlib, after walking into an attack on a funeral that killed at least 21 people.

“We gave the six with their cars to a U.N. convoy near the entrance of Khan Sheikhoun. They are all safe, in good heath and on their way to Damascus,” Free Syrian Army commander Abu Hassan said by satellite phone from the site of the handover.

A pro-government TV station said unidentified gunmen opened fire at the funeral. But the rebel commander said a pro-Assad militia was responsible. His forces had the names of at least 27 people killed, he added. Other opposition groups have said at least 66 people were killed.

The head of the U.N. monitoring mission, Major-General Robert Mood, confirmed the monitors were heading back to base.

“They have departed from Khan Sheikhoun and are on their way back. They expressed to me that they have been well treated,” he told reporters in Damascus.

He thanked the Syrian government for “facilitating coordination” for the exit of the observers, and to the people of Khan Sheikhoun, about 220 km (140 miles) north of Damascus, for treating them “with respect.”

“That kind of violence is obviously the kind of violence we don’t want to see,” he said. “It is not going to contribute constructively to the aspirations of the Syrian people.”

ACCOUNT OF NEW MASSACRE

The handover came as a Britain-based opposition group, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said at least 15 people had been killed since Tuesday when security forces stormed the Shammas district of Homs, parts of which Assad’s forces reduced to rubble with artillery fire earlier this year.

The group said security forces carried out summary executions in the city. Footage distributed on YouTube showed bodies – some with what looked like gunshot wounds – purported to be those killed during raids in the city.

There was no independent confirmation of the claims from within Syria, which has restricted media access during the 14-month-old uprising.

The Free Syrian Army has a nominal leader based in Turkey and tenuous ties with the divided political opposition group, the Syrian National Council (SNC), which on Tuesday re-elected Burhan Ghalioun, a secular long-time resident in France, as its leader for another three months.

People involved in the vote, which took place in Rome, said Ghalioun was viewed as acceptable to Syria’s array of sects and ethnic groups, and to major factions within the umbrella SNC which seeks recognition as the sole legitimate opposition group to Assad.

Shortly afterwards, Fawaz Tello, a prominent dissident, resigned from the SNC, the latest of several senior figures to quit the body in recent months. [ID:nL5E8GFMSD] The SNC said he was not a member in the first place, underscoring tensions within the organization.

As the SNC debated its leadership, Damascus announced the results of parliamentary elections it points to as proof of Assad’s determination to resolve the uprising peacefully.

(Additional reporting by Mariam Karouny and Steve Gutterman in Moscow; Writing by Joseph Logan; Editing by Andrew Osborn)


Reuters: World News

Hollande names new French cabinet, Aubry out

France's new President Francois Hollande (C) stands in the rain as he attends a ceremony at the Arc de Triomphe after his investiture ceremony in Paris May 15, 2012. REUTERS/Regis Duvignau


PARIS |
Wed May 16, 2012 2:23pm EDT

(Reuters) – French President Francois Hollande named a government dominated by moderate left-wingers on Wednesday after Socialist Party boss Martine Aubry, overlooked for the post of prime minister, said she no longer wanted to be part of the new cabinet.

Hollande, sworn in a day earlier as France’s first Socialist president in 17 years, named Pierre Moscovici as finance minister and Laurent Fabius as foreign minister, key posts under prime minister Jean-Marc Ayrault, a social democrat like them.

Moscovici takes charge of a stagnant economy lumbered with a jobless rate of almost 10 percent and the challenge of cutting heavy debts as Hollande launches his campaign against excessive austerity in Europe, a region struggling with a financial market crisis for more than two years now.

The new lineup, which could change again after parliamentary elections come to a close on June 17, is set to meet for a first time on Thursday before Hollande heads to summits of the G8 group of wealthy countries, and another one for NATO, in the United States.

Aubry, who last year lost a contest against Hollande to run for president on the Socialist ticket, made it clear she would stay away rather than settle for a consolation post – removing an experienced former minister with a reputation as a more fist-thumping left-winger from the team.

Aubry, daughter of former European Commission chief Jacques Delors and architect of France’s 35-hour week as labor minister in the last left-wing government of 1997-2002, told Le Monde newspaper:

“I talked with Francois Hollande. He said he had settled for Jean-Marc Ayrault. We agreed that under this configuration my presence in the government made little sense.”

OLD AND NEW

Ayrault, a veteran social democrat who, like Hollande, has never been a minister, will head up a team that mixes a number of old hands and new blood.

Manuel Valls, 49 and the closest thing his party has to a right-winger, was named interior minister.

Najat Vallaud Belkacem, a 34-year-old woman who was one of Hollande’s campaign spokespeople team, was named government spokeswoman. She was one of several women recruited to a cabinet Hollande said should comprise both sexes in equal number.

Moscovici, a graduate of the elite ENA civil service school who was Hollande’s presidential campaign chief, initially had been expected to get a post other than finance. The 54-year-old is an English speaker who served as a junior European affairs minister in a previous Socialist-led coalition a decade ago.

He wound up taking a key job that was long expected to go to Michel Sapin, one of Hollande’s closest long-time friends and a figure who believes blanket austerity risks plunging the euro zone into deep recession.

Sapin became labor minister while Arnaud Montebourg, an outspoken lawyer and member of parliament who has made a name for himself as a vociferous critic of globalization, was put in charge of industrial revival.

Fabius, the new face of foreign policy, was prime minister at just 37 in 1984 under the late Socialist President Francois Mitterrand and served as finance minister for ex-Prime Minister Lionel Jospin in 2000-2002.

He has been more of an enemy than friend of Hollande in the past. Fabius, 65, treated Hollande with disdain when the two men clashed over Europe in 2005. Fabius campaigned for a “No” vote in a referendum on a European Constitutional treaty that Hollande, then Socialist Party leader, supported.

DELICATE BALANCE

The changeover from a conservative administration does not appear to have rattled markets for now, despite Hollande’s vow to plead against excessive austerity in debt-stricken Europe.

Demand was solid on Wednesday at a first bond auction since Hollande took office, with the yield on the benchmark five-year bond hitting a record low of 1.72 percent as political turmoil in Greece drove investors towards the safe haven of French debt.

Hollande had been expected to find a heavyweight job for Aubry both because of her experience and the need to hold together a historically fractious party.

Right-wingers from former president Nicolas Sarkozy’s UMP party seized on Aubry’s exclusion to say the Socialist show on unity behind Hollande was a charade that voters should not fall for in the parliamentary elections, which take place in two rounds on June 10 and 17.

The working assumption is that France’s 46 million voters should give the left control of parliament on the heels of Hollande’s presidential victory.

(Additional reporting by Leigh Thomas and Nicholas Vinocur in Paris; Pierre Savary in Lille; Writing by Brian Love; Editing by Michael Roddy)


Reuters: World News

Judge to lead Greece to fateful June 17 election

Newly appointed caretaker Prime Minister Panagiotis Pikrammenos pauses as he talks with Greece's President Karolos Papoulias (not pictured) during their meeting in Athens May 16, 2012. REUTERS/John Kolesidis


ATHENS |
Wed May 16, 2012 3:12pm EDT

(Reuters) – Greece put a senior judge in charge of an emergency government on Wednesday to lead the nation to new elections on June 17 and bankers tried to calm public fears after the president said political chaos risked causing panic and a run on deposits.

In a blow to confidence, the European Central Bank said it had halted liquidity operations with some Greek banks because their capital was too depleted. That means they can no longer offer assets to the ECB as collateral for loans, and would have to seek costlier emergency financing from the Bank of Greece.

It was not immediately clear which banks, or how many of them, were affected. One person familiar with the matter said the capital of four Greek banks was so low that they were operating with negative equity.

Greeks have withdrawn hundreds of millions of euros from banks in recent days as fears grow that the country might be forced out of the euro zone, although there has been no sign of a run on Athens bank branches.

Political leaders failed to form a coalition after an inconclusive election on May 6 when parties opposed to the austerity terms of Greece’s international bailout did well. This raised the chance that the rescue funds could be halted, pushing the country towards bankruptcy and a departure from the euro.

ECB President Mario Draghi said that the EU treaty did not give his bank responsibility for the euro zone’s composition.

“I want to state that our strong preference is that Greece will continue to stay in the euro zone,” he said in Frankfurt. However, he added: “Since the treaty does not foresee anything on (an) exit, this is not a matter for the ECB to decide.”

President Karolos Papoulias named supreme administrative court head Panagiotis Pikrammenos as caretaker prime minister.

Pikrammenos will have no power to take political decisions, only to lead Greece to the vote. The parliament that was elected on May 6 will convene on Thursday and be immediately dissolved, a presidency source said.

The interim leader, who was sworn in at a brief ceremony presided over by Archbishop Ieronimos on Athens on Wednesday, is little known. State television said he was born in 1945 and studied law in Athens and Paris.

“Thank you for your trust, and I believe that I am worthy of this mission,” Pikrammenos said at a meeting with the president. “This is purely a caretaker government. However, it escapes no one that our country is going through difficult times.”

Pikrammenos, who noted that his name means “sorrowful”, is due to unveil his government later on Wednesday.

Socialist leader Evangelos Venizelos, the former finance minister, hinted at the latest problems afflicting the banks, saying the caretaker government would have to deal with the issue of bank recapitalization and pointing out that banks’ capital adequacy was a cause for concern.

LEFTISTS LEAD

A new opinion poll confirmed what other surveys have shown: that radical leftists who reject the bailout agreed with the European Union and International Monetary Fund are poised for victory, and the two establishment parties that agreed the rescue are sinking further.

The leftists argue they can tear up the bailout deal and keep the euro, but European leaders say if Greece fails to meet promises to them, lenders will pull the plug on financing.

On Monday, the president told party chiefs that figures from the central bank headed by George Provopoulos showed savers had withdrawn up to 800 million euros ($ 1 billion) from banks.

“Mr. Provopoulos told me there was no panic, but there was great fear that could develop into a panic,” Papoulias was quoted as saying in minutes of a meeting to discuss a coalition.

Several banking sources told Reuters that similar amounts had also been withdrawn on Tuesday. Nevertheless, there was no sign of panic or queues at bank branches in Athens on Wednesday. Bankers dismissed suggestions that a bank run was looming.

A senior executive at a large Greek bank told Reuters: “There is no bank run, no queues or panic. The situation is better than I expected. The amount of deposit withdrawals the president mentioned referred to three days, not one.”

Still, some were taking no risks. A 60-year-old textiles store owner who gave his name only as Nasos said he had transferred 10,000 euros over the phone to a bank in fellow euro zone state Cyprus on Tuesday afternoon.

“Any way you see it, things are difficult. If they call elections on June 17 – a Sunday – then everyone will take their money out on the Friday.” That June 17 date was later confirmed.

Greeks have already been withdrawing their savings from banks at a sharp clip – nearly a third of bank deposits were withdrawn between January 2010 and March 2012, reducing total Greek household and business deposits to 165 billion euros.

Charles Dallara, chief negotiator for the body representing private sector holders of Greek bonds, said there had been “a pickup in deposit flight from Greece”.

Dallara, who as head of the International Institute of Finance spent months negotiating the largest ever sovereign debt restructuring, said a Greek exit from the euro zone would be “somewhere between catastrophic and Armageddon” for Europe.

BANK WITHDRAWALS

Analysts predicted Greece would avoid a bank run, if only because so many people have pulled out their savings already.

“We have witnessed periods of tension before when the banks experienced large outflows. In my view, the majority of people with these concerns would have done so by now,” said Alex Tsirigotis, Greek banks analyst at Mediobanca.

The specter of Greece quitting the single currency sent the euro and European shares to a fresh four-month low on Wednesday and raised the yields on Spanish and Italian debt, reflecting the risk that other European countries will be hurt.

Greece’s two wounded establishment parties hope to persuade voters that the election will be a referendum on the euro, which nearly 80 percent of Greeks say they want to keep. The view from Brussels is clearly that Greek euro membership is now at stake.

“It is important that the Greek people now take a decision fully informed about the consequences,” European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso told a news conference.

“The ultimate resolve to stay in the euro area must come from Greece itself,” Barroso said. “We must tell the people that the program for Greece is the least difficult of all the difficult alternatives.” ($ 1 = 0.7828 euros)

(Additional reporting by George Georgiopoulos and Karolina Tagaris in Athens, Marc Jones and Andreas Framke in Frankfurt, Annika Breidthardt in Berlin and Luke Baker in Brussels; Writing by Peter Graff and Deepa Babington; editing by David Stamp)


Reuters: World News

Exclusive: Iran flouts U.N. sanctions, sends arms to Syria: panel

Members of the United Nations observers mission in Syria wait at a hotel lobby in Damascus, before heading to areas where protests against the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad have been taking place, May 16, 2012. REUTERS/Khaled al-Hariri

Members of the United Nations observers mission in Syria wait at a hotel lobby in Damascus, before heading to areas where protests against the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad have been taking place, May 16, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Khaled al-Hariri


UNITED NATIONS |
Wed May 16, 2012 3:17pm EDT

(Reuters) – Syria remains the top destination for Iranian arms shipments in violation of a U.N. Security Council ban on weapons exports by the Islamic Republic, according to a confidential draft report by a U.N. panel of experts seen by Reuters on Wednesday.

Iran, like Russia, is one of Syria’s few allies as it presses ahead with a 14-month old assault on opposition forces determined to oust Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

The report, which the expert panel has submitted to the Security Council’s Iran sanctions committee, said there were three seizures of large shipments of Iranian weapons investigated by the panel over the past year.

“Two of these cases involved the Syrian Arab Republic, as were the majority of cases inspected by the Panel during its previous mandate, underscoring that Syria continues to be the central party to illicit Iranian arms transfers,” it said.

“The Panel recommends the designation (blacklisting) of two entities related to these interdictions,” it said. “The report also takes note of information concerning arms shipments by Iran to other destinations.”

The report also discusses Iran’s attempts to circumvent sanctions on its nuclear program but notes that the four rounds of punitive measures the 15-nation Security Council imposed on Iran between 2006 and 2010 were having an impact.

“Sanctions are slowing Iran’s procurement of some critical items required for its prohibited nuclear program,” it said. “At the same time prohibited activities continue, including uranium enrichment.”

The report talks at length about Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines, known as IRISL. While IRISL itself is not formally under U.N. sanctions, three of its subsidiaries have been sanctioned and the council has warned U.N. member states to be vigilant regarding potential sanctions violations by IRISL.

The panel report says that one of IRISL’s sanctioned subsidiaries, Irano Hind Shipping Company, continues to operate vessels. It also says that IRISL is a challenging company to monitor as it is constantly changing the ownership, names and national flags of its ships.

Diplomats told Reuters that the panel’s draft report may be changed by the Security Council’s Iran sanctions committee before it is submitted to the council itself for consideration. Last year’s expert panel report on Iran was never made public because Russia blocked its publication.

(Reporting by Louis Charbonneau; Editing by Anthony Boadle and Vicki Allen)


Reuters: World News