Charges against alleged North Korea agent 'of gravest nature'
Local Source The Australian 3h ago
Sydney man charged with being 'economic agent' for North Korea
BBC News 3h ago
Voice of America 33m ago
From Australia Daily Telegraph 1h ago
begin quote from:
In Depth CNN 3h ago
Australian police accuse man of acting as North Korean economic agent
Story highlights
- Authorities say the actions of a 59-year-old man breached UN and Australian sanctions
- The maximum penalty is 10 years' imprisonment
(CNN)The
Australian Federal Police have arrested a 59-year-old Australian man
for allegedly acting as an economic agent for North Korea with the
intent of raising revenue for the Pyongyang government.
Authorities identified the man as Chan Han Choi, a South Korean-born Sydney man, CNN affiliate Seven Network Australia reported.
Police
said the man, a naturalized Australian citizen, allegedly brokered the
sale of missiles, missile components and expertise from North Korea to
other international entities, and discussed the supply of weapons of
mass destruction.
He
also planned to transfer coal from North Korea to entities in Vietnam
and Indonesia, police said. Police said there is no evidence that the
governments of those two countries were aware of the plan.
These
actions are alleged breaches of UN and Australian sanctions. Recent UN
sanctions have targeted everything from seafood exports, foreign labor
and joint ventures with North Korea.
The arrested man is facing six charges in connection with the acts.
"This case is like nothing we have ever seen on Australian soil," Australian Federal Police Assistant Commissioner Neil Gaughan
"This
is the first time charges have been laid under the Commonwealth Weapons
of Mass Destruction Act in Australia, and the first time we have laid
charges specifically for alleged breaches of UN sanctions against North
Korea."
Choi didn't appear or apply
for bail during court on Sunday, and bail was formally refused by
Acting Magistrate Carl Milovanovich, the CNN affiliate reported.
Police started investigating the suspect after a tip "from another international agency on another matter."
According
to the Seven Network report, Gaughan said the business activity
occurred offshore and that "there had been no risk to the Australian
public and that no weapons, or missile componentry -- which he said was
software-- had been imported into Australia."
"This
man was a loyal agent of North Korea, who believed he was acting to
serve some higher patriotic purpose," Gaughan said, according to Seven
Network Australia.
"I think at the end of the day he would sell whatever he could to make money back for the North Korean government."
The Seven Network report said that "Choi has been charged over two transactions that were unsuccessful, but there may be more."
"But we estimate that if these trades were successful we're talking tens of millions of dollars," he told reporters in Sydney.
The suspect was on police radar
Police allege that:
•
"The man provided services to a Weapons of Mass Destruction Program and
discussed the sale of specialist services and ballistic missile
technology, with a view to generating income for the North Korean
regime."
• "Those discussions have
included the establishment of a ballistic missile production facility,
the supply of missile construction plans and the provision of North
Korean technical specialists for training and development outside of
North Korea."
• "He discussed the possible sale of missile guidance systems in an effort to generate further income for North Korea."
Gaughan
said the man had been under investigation for months. AFP officers
conducted search warrants in Sydney on Saturday and the man was
"subsequently arrested" in the Sydney suburb of Eastwood.
The maximum penalty for the offenses is 10 years' imprisonment, police said.
"The
Australian public should be assured that police have acted to ensure no
direct risk to our community. The AFP endeavours to support
international efforts to maintain peace and security," Gaughan said in
the police statement.
"Any individual who attempts to fly in the face of sanctions cannot and will not go unnoticed in Australia."
More charges against the man have not been ruled out, according to the police statement.
Australian relations with North Korea
Australia is a US ally and its government has voiced support for the United States' policy on North Korea.
Pyongyang
has continually assailed Australia as a "vassal country" of the United
States in recent releases from North Korean state media.
In
early October, a spokesman for the North Korean Foreign Ministry told
the country's state-run Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) that
Australia's support for the United States in opposing North Korea was a
"suicidal act."
"Australia will be
unable to avoid a disaster if it keeps toeing the US line of military,
economic and diplomatic pressure upon the DPRK despite its repeated
warnings," the Foreign Ministry spokesman was quoted as saying.
"It
should be prudent in speech and conduct with its own principle, instead
of blindly following the US' policy of aggression, and realize that
working to develop friendly relations with other countries is the best
way to its security."
Australia was
one of a number of countries addressed in an open letter from North
Korea in October, in which Pyongyang accused the US of declaring war.
The letter followed US President Donald Trump's September address to the United Nations
in which he said "the United States has great strength and patience,
but if it is forced to defend itself or its allies, we will have no
choice but to totally destroy North Korea."Australian Prime Minister
Malcolm Turnbull and Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said then they
believed Pyongyang's letter showed that North Korea was getting
desperate as the US and its allies ramped up sanctions on the rogue
regime.
"I see it as evidence that
the collective strategy of imposing maximum diplomatic and economic
pressure through sanctions on North Korea is working," Bishop said.
The Australian navy held joint military exercises with its South Korean and US counterparts off South Korea's coast in November.
South
Korea has been a long-term ally of the United States, since the two
states fought together during the Korean War in the 1950s.
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