February 1, 2019
Risky Business: UANI Pressure
Campaign Results in Cancelled Iran Business Forum
Following UANI Engagement,
Pro-Iran Business Forum in Berlin Did Not Take Place
(New
York, NY) - Following a series
of engagements with United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI), the C5 group
of London cancelled the Iran Trade & Investment Forum, which was
scheduled to take place this year on January 22 and 23 in Berlin. The
forum had been marketed as an opportunity to
"capitalize on the wealth of available opportunities in [the
Iranian] market, whilst developing a robust legal and compliance
framework" and would have followed similar events held in 2017
and 2018.
C5's cancellation comes as leaders of the European Union
(EU) facilitate the creation of a special purpose vehicle (SPV),
"INSTEX," designed to allow businesses to circumvent U.S.
sanctions against Iran. The SPV has been derided as unnecessary and a
security risk, especially as European businesses have shown
that there is no appetite for doing business in Iran.
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C5's webpage on the Iran Trade & Investment Forum,
prior (left) and after (right) its cancellation.
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"Any business that chooses to engage with Iran is
knowingly boosting the economy of the world's leading state sponsor
of terrorism and undermining U.S. national security strategy,"
said UANI CEO Mark D. Wallace. "We are pleased that C5 decided
to cancel this year's Iran Trade & Investment Forum and urge the
firm to refrain from planning any similar events in the future.
Maximum economic pressure on Iran must be maintained and UANI will
continue its work to achieve it."
In past years, UANI successfully persuaded individual
companies to withdraw from the forum. In 2017, Italian insurance
giant Generali wrote to Ambassador Wallace that it had
"reconsidered the decision to speak at the [1st] Forum"
after hearing from UANI. Prior to the second forum in January 2018,
Ambassador Wallace spoke directly with C5, explaining Iran's status
as the world's leading state sponsor of terrorism. UANI and
Ambassador Wallace protested again in December 2018, at which time
the third forum, due to take place in January 2019, was canceled.
"Engaging with Iranian entities only leads
companies to be cheated, misled, and reputationally and irreparably
harmed. In 2018, Norwegian shipper Skaugen reported to UANI that its Iranian customers simply refused to pay. Not
surprisingly, they stopped making calls to any Iranian ports,"
said Wallace. "UANI will continue to advocate that companies
around the globe cut ties with the Iranian regime or preferably never
create them in the first place."
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