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BENJAMIN WEINTHAL/Despite nuclear deal, Iran remains dangerous for European banks/Hajj stampede: Saudi rejects Iranian criticism

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Analysis: Despite nuclear deal, Iran remains dangerous for European banks
By BENJAMIN WEINTHAL/09/27/2015

The closure by Commerzbank this month of an account belonging to supporters of Hezbollah and the Tehran regime opens a window into the challenges faced by financial institutions seeking to re-enter the Iranian market. While a spokesman for Germany’s second largest bank did not disclose the reason to The Jerusalem Post for pulling the plug on the account, Commerzbank’s March agreement to pay US financial regulators a $1.45 billion fine as part of its illicit dealings with Iran probably played a role. Put simply, Iran is still toxic for many banks.

The UK’s The Independent reported on Tuesday in an article titled “Sanctions-busting fears could drive banks away from Iran” that Ross Denton, sanctions expert at law firm Baker and McKenzie, said: “I can’t see any Western banks wanting to get involved with Iran for a long time. So if companies want to work out there, they’ll have to do it in euros and with banks from Russia, China or India. It’s going to be difficult and take time. Jump the gun, cut corners and you’re going to get absolutely murdered in the US.” In a Guardian report from the second Iran-Europe business forum in Geneva on Thursday and Friday, Andreas Schweitzer, a representative from a Maltese company that conducts wind power business in Iran, said “There are European banks who can deal with Iran even now. Small banks which have no business with the US work with Iran. Big banks in theory can operate too but they have reputation issues.”

Iran’s financial sector is high-risk, because it is largely contaminated with transactions for its nuclear program and ballistic missiles sector. Iran announced on Thursday that it canceled its December oil and gas conference in London, because of worries about sanctions. The conference has been rescheduled for February. Nevertheless, large foreign energy companies will surely face a Sisyphean task in securing large banks to channel their investments in Iran. Take this past week’s example of the complications of British bank Standard Chartered’s business dealings with Iran. The Financial Times reported that the bank sought business after it agreed in 2007 to stop its Iran business. The bank negotiated a 2012 settlement with US authorities to pay $667 million for sanctions busting.

According to the FT, Standard Chartered activated business in 2009 with the then-sanctioned National Iranian Oil Company. The US authorities could strip Standard Chartered of its license to operate in the US financial sector. That would spell the death knell for a financial organization. If there is a choice between retaining business in US markets and returning to Iran, European banks will, without hesitation, choose the US economy. After Stuart Levey, then the US Treasury Department’s first under secretary for terrorism and financial intelligence, lightly twisted the arms of such banks as Deutsche Bank in Germany, the banks capitulated and stopped business with Iran. There also appears to be growing pressure from US states and pension funds to stay away from companies and banks that invest in Iran.

Small banks or banks in volatile economic countries like Russia and China will likely fill the financial vacuum in Iran. The soundness of those banks does not bode well for foreign investments.
*Benjamin Weinthal is a fellow of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies.

Hajj stampede: Saudi rejects Iranian criticism
By Staff writer | Al Arabiya News/Sunday, 27 September 2015/Saudi Arabia’s foreign minister on Saturday firmly rejected Iran’s criticism of its handling of the hajj pilgrimage Saturday after Tehran demanded an inquiry into a stampede that killed at least 769 people. “I believe the Iranians should know better than to play politics with a tragedy that has befallen people who were performing their most sacred religious duty,” foreign minister Adel al-Jubeir said, according to Agence France-Presse. Iran’s President Hassan Rowhani, who is also in New York for the U.N. General Assembly, has demanded an inquiry into Wednesday’s disaster, in which at least 136 Iranians died. But Jubeir, delivering remarks along U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, insisted that Saudi Arabia was on top of the situation.

“The kingdom has had a long history of spending tremendous resources to care for the pilgrimage to ensure that the pilgrims who come there have a successful pilgrimage,” he said. “And we will reveal the facts when they emerge. And we will not hold anything back. If mistakes were made, who made them will be held accountable,” Jubeir said. “And we will make sure that we will learn from this and we will make sure that it doesn’t happen again. I want repeat again this is not a situation with which to play politics. “I would hope Iranian leaders would be more sensible and more thoughtful with regards to those who perished in this tragedy, and wait until we see the results of the investigation.”The death toll from Thursday’s deadly stampede outside the holy city of Makkah during this year’s Hajj pilgrimage climbed to 769, the Saudi Health Minister Khaled Al-Faleh said earlier on Saturday. The known number of injured now stands at 934, he said in a press conference adding that the Hajj season was void of any epidemics or disease.

Investigations to determine the cause behind the crush are still ongoing. Prominent Iranian writer and academic Sadegh Zibakalam criticized statements made by Iranian officials on the Mina incident saying that they stemmed out of events in Syria and Yemen. “As opposed to other Muslims, ours were the only reactions aimed at pre-judging who is responsible for the Mina tragedy,” he was quoted by Al Arabiya.net as saying. “The response [from Iranian officials] was based on unleashing anti-Arab sentiment that many Iranians bear.

The horrible Mina incident has allowed Iranians to unload their anger onto Arabs,” he added.A report in Asharq Al Awsat newspaper this week said 300 Iranian pilgrims were moving in the opposite direction against “large convoys” on Street 204 heading to the site where ritual of stoning the devil is performed before the crush happened. Quoting an unnamed source, the paper said that the almost 300 pilgrims did not wait at the site upon completion of the ritual as mandated by Hajj organizers. The worshipers instead moved out onto Street 204 as other groups made their way into the site, the report, cited by Al Arabiya.Net said


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