We've made some changes
to The Sunday Times
Kim Jong Il, the North Korean dictator, is planning to use the London gold
market to circumvent financial sanctions imposed by the international
community.
Mr Kim’s cash-strapped regime relisted its central bank with the London
Bullion Market Association this year and is preparing to sell gold through
London.
Gold traders said yesterday that they had seen no sign of the North Koreans
disposing of gold in London since the Chosun Central Bank regained its
status as a “good delivery supplier” this year. However, North Korea is
thought to be preparing to sell gold through London once it gets a regular
supply from its outdated mines.
The development of the mines is expected to be assisted by foreign investment,
The Times has learnt. One of the funds seeking to buy into the North
Korean gold market is the London-based Chosun Development & Investment
Fund.
Attempts by North Korea to gain access to the London gold market could be a
blow to American efforts to limit Mr Kim’s ability to pay for weapons of
mass destruction and nuclear materials. The US Treasury gave warning last
year that North Korea was using international banks to launder the proceeds
from currency counterfeiting and drug and weapon sales. The Government of
Macau subsequently froze $24 million held by the Banco Delta Asia.
The UN formalised financial sanctions against North Korea in October after Mr
Kim’s regime claimed to have detonated a nuclear device. However, gold sales
would not be covered by the UN sanctions and Mr Kim again would have access
to large quantities of foreign currency that could be used to fund a nuclear
programme.
It is believed that in the 1980s the North Koreans sold about a tonne of gold
a month — worth about $24 million (£12.2 million) today — through London.
North Korean goldmining aspirations are being assisted by foreign investors
who see opportunities there. Colin McAskill, the chairman of Koryo Asia and
investment adviser to the Chosun Development & Investment Fund, which
was established last year to invest in North Korea, said: “One of the
priorities of the fund is to redevelop the goldmining and other mineral
industries and bring the product back through London.”
Roger Barrett, who runs the Beijing-based Korea Business Consultants, a firm
that assists foreign enterprises in the North, said that he had helped to
facilitate a goldmining deal between Singaporean investors and North Korea
in 2002. The Chinese are also thought to be considering investments in the
North Korean mining sector.
However, gold producers cannot sell in London without attaining good-delivery
status. North Korea held that distinction from 1976 to the early 1990s, when
floods and mine collapses are thought to have shut down production there.
Having regained the status, the country will be able to sell into the London
market as soon as it can generate a regular supply of metal.
Yesterday the US Treasury Department declined to comment on the awarding of
good-delivery status to the North Koreans. A spokesman for the North Korean
Embassy in London said: “This world is full of these kinds of stories. It’s
all just blah, blah, blah.”
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