February 11,
2019
Risky Business: UANI Advocacy
Results in Another Blow to Iran Business Efforts
Contract
Terminated For Iranian Sanction-Designated Entity
(New
York, NY) - Two competing
visions for how Europe should manage its interactions with Iran are
playing out in real time. On the one hand, leaders from the United
Kingdom, France and Germany are working around the clock to
operationalize a mechanism to permit trade with Iran without
subjecting companies to U.S. sanctions. On the other hand is private
industry, which is coming to starkly different conclusions about
engaging the world's state sponsor of terrorism.
This week, the London-based CRU Group confirmed to UANI
that its Nitrogen
+ Syngas conference in Berlin has cancelled the contract of an
Iranian business leader who was scheduled to speak before several hundred
energy industry leaders. M. Mahdi Abadi, a senior process engineer
from the Iranian firm Kermanshah Petrochemical Industries, had been
invited to speak at this year's conference in March. But after UANI
alerted conference organizers that Kermanshah is a subsidiary of the
U.S.-sanctioned Parsian Oil and Gas Development Company, Abadi's
contract was terminated.
CRU's cancellation of Abadi's contract is a stark
example of the complexities of sanctions compliance and the opacity
of Iran's economy. "Engaging with Iranian businesses in any
capacity is dangerous and could be a violation of U.S. sanctions.
Compliance is complicated. It's expensive. And most decision makers
have concluded that it just isn't worth the risk to be involved with
Iran," said UANI President David Ibsen.
Providing opportunities for Iran to engage on the global stage as a
legitimate actor is also dangerous. Iran has been accused this past
year of plotting multiple bombings and assassinations on European
soil. Its support for terror proxies like Hezbollah, Hamas and the
Houthis in Yemen has continued unabated. Companies in Iran should not
be rewarded with the luxury of engaging in global business until and
unless the Iranian government changes its behavior.
Thankfully, that perspective is beginning to take hold in Europe.
Abadi's disinvitation from the Nitrogen + Syngas conference comes
just weeks after UANI
successfully led the effort to cancel the Iran Trade & Investment
Forum, which was also scheduled to be in Berlin. That conference
was being organized by another London firm, C5.
|
No comments:
Post a Comment