In January, Iran’s Revolutionary Guards seized a South Korean-flagged tanker, the Hankuk Chemi, and held it and its captain for three months, ostensibly over alleged environmental violations.
The seizure was widely seen in South Korea as an attempt to force Seoul’s hand over the frozen funds, although Tehran repeatedly denied there was any connection.
“UNACCEPTABLE”
Last week, Iran’s Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian warned that his country would sue South Korea if it continued to refuse to honour its debt.
“US pressure (on Seoul) is a fact but we cannot continue … to turn a blind eye to this question,” he said.
If Seoul fails to unblock the funds, the government would allow Iran’s central bank to take legal action against two South Korean lenders holding the money, he said.
Amir-Abdollahian said he spoke with his South Korean counterpart Chung Eui-yong about the issue at the end of last month.
“I told him it was unacceptable for our people to wait for three years” for the funds, he said.
Iranian media have quoted the South Korean minister as saying that he would do his best to resolve the problem, but Tehran remains unconvinced.
The foreign ministry official in Seoul rejected the idea of a South Korean “debt”, instead describing the amount as a “frozen fund”.
The money “cannot be delivered to Iran due to US sanctions, which prevents financial transactions with Tehran”, the official told AFP.
“We have been transferring the cost of crude oil imports to a Korean won account under the name of the Iranian central bank. And when a South Korean company exports to Iran, it receives payments from that account in Korean won,” the official added.
South Korea also had been “in close consultation with related parties and banks” to pay Iran’s arrears of around US$16 million to the United Nations, using the frozen fund, the official said, and the remittance process has been completed.
MADE IN IRAN
Lawmaker Salimi said the US had given South Korea approval to supply Iran with merchandise in lieu of returning the funds.
But the South Korean foreign ministry official said that “for now, only humanitarian transactions, such as medicines, are possible with frozen funds”.
Late last month, Iran’s President Ebrahim Raisi banned the import of household appliances from South Korea, on instruction from supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who said the imports could harm local production.
But South Korean appliances are still in high demand, despite the ban.
The head of Iran’s appliances sector union said Iran’s home appliance market is worth US$6 billion per year, 40 per cent of which is contraband goods smuggled in from abroad.
Maryam, a bride-to-be shopping in Tehran’s Amin-Hozour street, a hub for household appliances, said she preferred to buy foreign products because “the quality is better and the prices are not so different from what is produced locally”.
But Amine Feizi, a machine operator, said he had bought a fridge, a washing machine and a television set, all made in the Islamic republic.
“I prefer products made in Iran because foreign ones are more expensive and because I want to support national production,” Feizi said.
“In the years since our country has been under sanctions, the quality of Iranian-made products has improved.”
Source: CNA