This Article is From Aug 24, 2017

How A Chinese Entrepreneur Evaded Sanctions And Financed Kim Jong Un's Nuclear Weapons Program

Chi Yupeng, a 48-year-old Chinese accountant, controls a network of companies that in recent years imported $700 million of North Korean coal.

How A Chinese Entrepreneur Evaded Sanctions And Financed Kim Jong Un's Nuclear Weapons Program

Chi Yupeng traded nuclear missile components for North Korean coal

Highlights

  • Chi Yupeng controls companies which import North Korean coal
  • Nuclear device and missile components exported in exchange for coal
  • Details of business network are contained in a US lawsuit
Among the flurry of U.S. legal maneuverings on Tuesday involving North Korea, maybe the most revealing involves a federal lawsuit aimed at the businesses of one Chinese entrepreneur.

Chi Yupeng, a 48-year-old Chinese accountant, controls a network of companies that in recent years imported $700 million of North Korean coal.

And in return for the North Korean coal, according to U.S. officials, Chi's companies sent back to North Korea an array of products: cellphones, sugar, luxury items and, perhaps most importantly, components of nuclear devices and missiles.

The details of Chi's business network, laid out in a U.S. lawsuit seeking the forfeiture of funds that flowed through U.S. banks, suggest just how easy it was for one Chinese entrepreneur to evade the trade restrictions against North Korea and, more broadly, how important such trade has been in the development North Korea's ever more fearsome arsenal.

Escalating trade sanctions enacted by the U.S. and the U.N. Security Council since 2006 have been accompanied at times by rhetoric suggesting that the regime of Kim Jong Un had been cut off from the world's economy. But the Chi case, in addition to showing how porous the sanctions have been, underscore how the North Korean weapons program has relied on the country's coal exports to China - which were booming until earlier this year.

One of Chi's companies, Dandong Zhicheng Metallic Material, was the largest importer of North Korean coal, bringing in $234 million in 2016, according to Panjiva, a global trade data analytics company. And despite worldwide scrutiny of the North Korean coal trade, transactions involving Chi Yupeng's companies in China and North Korean coal continued into June of this year.

"Chi Yupeng's companies represented almost 10 percent of Chinese imports from North Korea last year. That speaks to the scale of their operation," said David Thompson, senior analyst at C4ADS, a nonprofit that researches illicit networks and has focused on the Chi Yupeng group. "The really important point here is the large scale these sanction-evading companies are operating at and the access to the international financial system they are giving North Korea."

Based in part on the accounts of three confidential informants and two unnamed defectors, the U.S. lawsuit filed on Tuesday seeks the forfeiture of $4 million from Chi Yupeng's companies, as well as more than $100 million in other penalties.

One of the defectors that U.S. attorneys are relying on appears to have been very well-placed - the defector had first hand knowledge of "Office 39," a group that maintains a reserve of money for Kim Jong Un.

According to that defector, the North Korean military controls the amount of coal produced and its exportation. Kim puts over 95 percent of the foreign currency earned from coal exports to North Korea's military and weapons programs, the defector said.

As a major coal importer, then, Chi Yupeng would have been a critical point of contact for the North Korean regime.

According to the defector, the regime relies on "a relatively small group of trusted individuals who have reliably provided the North Korean government with desired services" and Chi Yupeng is one of those trusted individuals.

A second defector, said to have intimate knowledge of North Korea's coal exports to China, corroborated much of what the first defector asserted, according to federal attorneys.

Chi Yupeng founded a company, Dandong Zhicheng Metallic Material, in 2005 and in recent years it has become the largest importer of North Korean coal. His wife, Zhang Bing, is the company's manager, according to company filings.

Not much else is known about Chi, but he is listed as an alumni of Bohai University, where he graduated in 1990. His biography on the university alumni site said he became an accountant in Dandong in 1990. In 2009, four years after forming his company, he was awarded a plaque from the "Dandong Municipal People's Government" for his role in foreign trade.

According to the alumni bio, Chi "always commands himself to inspire colleagues around him with the charisma of a leader; the overall professional ambiance of the company is very harmonious, and the attitude of the employees very positive. In his management of the company, he delves deeply into the forces of sustained development of the enterprise."

According to the lawsuit, Chi Yupeng's companies use a couple of different methods to avoid being caught for violation of trade sanctions.

One is that instead of sending money back and forth - a system that often requires the use of banking and risks detection - the Chi Yupeng network instead sometimes used a system of barter: that is, North Korea would send coal to Chi Yupeng, and Chi Yupeng would send back desired goods - everything from sugar to weapons components.

The other method of evasion more directly involves the front companies, according to the government. These allowed Chi's network - despite repeated sanctions measures by the U.S. - to use U.S. banks in conducting business with North Korea. While banks can detect and block transactions involving sanctioned businesses, they often miss transactions involving related companies because they do business under a different name.

It was the U.S. transactions involving Chi's companies that led the Department of Justice to seek on Tuesday the forfeiture of $4 million in funds. The money is being held in U.S. accounts.

"These front companies are supporting sanctioned North Korean entities, including North Korean military and North Korean weapons programs," U.S. Attorney Channing Phillips said in a statement referring to the legal filings.

(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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