Your Mail

ÚŃČí

 

Counseling:

Ask the Scholar

|

Ask About Islam

|

Hajj & `Umrah

|

Cyber Counselor

|

Parenting Counselor

 


Britain And U.S. Tighten Grip On Smuggled Iraqi Oil

 

DUBAI, Feb 5 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Naval policing has managed to keep in check Iraqi oil smuggled through Gulf waters in "rustbucket and unseaworthy" tankers, British officials were quoted by news agencies as saying Monday.

"The focus of the sanctions is on oil, and smuggling will remain limited as long as the MIF remains in place," said Simon Collis, Britain's consul general in Dubai, referring to a U.S.-led Multinational Interception Force (MIF) of Western navies. The force fills the Gulf with ships and helicopters enforcing U.N. sanctions on Iraq, including those imposed on oil trade.

Collis estimated that Iraq's revenues in 2000 from oil smuggling, by land as well as through the Gulf, totaled $600 million, compared to $16 billion in revenues from a humanitarian program on U.N. authorized oil exports.

The smuggling "is limited and it will not, by itself, lead to an erosion of sanctions," which have been in force ever since Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1990, the diplomat said at a press briefing aboard a British frigate, HMS Cumberland.

"We have no particular concern for other goods," he said, referring to the sizeable, but less valuable, export of Iraqi dates.

Iraq has been under strict U.N.-imposed sanctions for the past 10 years that has cost Iraq billions of dollars and caused the death of hundreds of thousands of its residents, which, some say has caused Iraq to find no option than to resort to oil and fuel smuggling. Hundreds of sailors and middle-aged men from at least three countries are employed in the business as a means to make a living.

The U.N. has also warned both Iran and the United Arab Emirates to end their involvement with Iraq's smuggling operations.

But Western observers say the real profiteer of these smuggling operations is Saddam Hussein. They estimate that Hussein has brought in at least $10 million a month in cash and goods from oil and fuel smuggling.

Captain David Cooke, commander of the Cumberland, said loads of between 1,000 and 1,500 tons of oil, mostly semi-refined products but also gas and diesel oil, were being smuggled out on "small rustbucket" ships.

"They have been bought with the intention of smuggling until they fall apart, with no maintenance," he said, adding that the tankers were on average 30 years old, mechanically unreliable and mostly unseaworthy.

"They are a menace to other ships," Cooke warned.

Vessels with illegal cargoes that are intercepted by the MIF are escorted into Gulf ports, where the ships and the oil are auctioned off. The oil proceeds go into the U.N. escrow account for Iraq.

The crews, made up mostly of Iraqi captains and Asians, put up a "passive defense but no resistance," said Cooke. They weld up access windows and barricade themselves into the bridge with metal sheets, leaving only a gap to navigate.

The volume of Iraqi oil being smuggled out through the Gulf varies, from an estimated high of 400,000 tons last July, dropping to levels of around 50,000 tons, according to British navy figures.

Ships carrying contraband oil sail down the Shatt al-Arab waterway between Iraq and Iran and then hug the Iranian coastline until reaching the Strait of Hormuz in the southern Gulf.

At that point, the ships try to dart across to ports in the United Arab Emirates as Western navies try to intercept them in international waters, or the smugglers exit the Gulf and offload onto larger tankers.

The Kuwaiti navy and coast guard, which "see a greater level of smuggling activity in their own backyard," play a key role in policing the northern Gulf, said Cooke.

 

Yesterday's News  

Search Articles 

News Archive :
Day:   Month: Year:   


Send Mail

News | Shari`ah | Health & Science | Politics in Depth | Reading Islam | Family | Culture | Youth | Euro-Muslims

About Us | Speech of Sheikh Qaradawi | Contact Us | Advertise | Support IOL | Site Map