Italy blocks sale of yachts bound for North Korea
MILAN — Italy has blocked the nearly euro13-million ($18-million) sale of two luxury yachts believed to have been bound for the impoverished nation of North Korea in violation of international sanctions, authorities said Thursday.
The 95-foot and 105-foot Italian-made seafaring vessels were ordered from the Azimut-Benetti maker of luxury yachts by an Austrian company, and a Chinese firm stepped in later to complete the purchase, the Economic Development Ministry said.
An investigation determined that the yachts ultimately were bound for the reclusive communist nation in violation of international sanctions barring sale of luxury goods to North Korea, the ministry said.
The impoverished nation relies on foreign aid to feed its 24 million people. At the same time, its leader Kim Jong Il, now said to be gravely ill, is known to own yachts, limousines and thoroughbred horses.
A person answering the phone at the North Korean Embassy in Rome said no one was available to comment.
The United Nations has placed trade, travel and other sanctions, including the sale of luxury items, on North Korea to pressure Pyongyang to abandon its nuclear program.
Azimut, based outside of Turin in northern Italy, has not been accused of any wrongdoing, and the company said in a statement that it had been the victim of “contractual fraud.”
“Behind an apparently normal operation, the buyers in reality were hiding an attempt to violate international embargo against North Korea, the real destination of the two vessels,” Azimut said.
Azimut spokeswoman Danila Sabella said the initial order and down payment for the two vessels — one with four cabins, the other with five, and both finished with cherry wood interiors — came from an Austrian firm, which then ceded the purchase to a Chinese company.
“There was nothing particularly strange,” Sabella said.
The Chinese firm said the yachts were destined for China, which also was not unusual, Sabella noted. Azimut has a sales office in Shanghai and “we have sold other boats in the area where they were destined,” she said.
“In the meantime, the financial police began an investigation and there emerged this international intrigue. In the end, the rogues were unmasked, and boats sequestered,” Sabella said.
It was not clear how authorities connected the yachts to North Korea or to whom they were being shipped. The Austrian and Chinese companies were not named.
It was also not clear if the incident would result in charges.
The yachts, which were built at a shipyard in Viareggio in Tuscany, were held for about a month, then returned to Azimut, which is free to sell them, Sabella said. Authorities also returned to Azimut the euro13 million paid for the boats that it had seized, but Azimut will turn over any proceeds from an eventual sale to authorities.
The step was taken to prevent Azimut from suffering financial consequences, the company said in a statement.
Sabella said she doubted that the boats, which also have a sunning terrace and a hot tub, would fetch the original sale price given the global economic crisis, which has hit also luxury boatmakers.
Related News
North Korea demands South Korea return 11 defectors, but Seoul says it won'tOctober 4th, 2009 North Korea demands SKorea return 11 defectorsSEOUL, South Korea — South Korea's Unification Ministry says North Korea has demanded Seoul return 11 people who defected to the South by sea last week. The ministry says in a statement that the North sent its demand in a message Sunday.
China seizes steel-hardening metal hidden in truck bound for North KoreaJuly 28th, 2009 China says it seizes metals bound for NKoreaBEIJING — Chinese customs authorities have seized a stash of vanadium, a strategic metal used to strengthen steel, hidden in fruit boxes on a truck bound for North Korea, an official said Tuesday. Vanadium has defense and nuclear applications — alloys with vanadium are used in missile casings — but it was not clear what the stash would be used for.
SKorea considers how to inspect suspicious NKorean ships, while US envoy presses talksJuly 20th, 2009 SKorea plans how to inspect suspicious NK shipsSEOUL, South Korea — South Korea's coast guard said Monday it is drawing up guidelines on how to inspect North Korean ships suspected of carrying banned items — a move expected to enrage Pyongyang, which has warned it would consider such inspections a declaration of war. The move came as a senior U.S.
S. Korea considers how to inspect suspicious N. Korean ships, while US envoy presses talksJuly 20th, 2009 S. Korea plans how to inspect N. Korean shipsSEOUL, South Korea — South Korea's coast guard said Monday it is drawing up guidelines on how to inspect North Korean ships suspected of carrying banned items — a move expected to enrage Pyongyang, which has warned it would consider such inspections a declaration of war.
G-8 strongly condemns North Korea's nuclear test and ballistic missile launchJuly 9th, 2009 G-8 condemns North Korea's nuclear testL'AQUILA, Italy — Group of Eight leaders have condemned "in the strongest terms" North Korea's nuclear test and ballistic missile launches. A G-8 statement Wednesday says North Korea's actions "pose a danger to peace and stability in the region and beyond."
North Korea conducted a nuclear test in May, and ballistic missile launches in April and again just days before the summit.
North Korea fires two missiles, claims South KoreaJuly 2nd, 2009 SEOUL - North Korea Thursday fired what appeared to be two short-range missiles off its east coast, a South Korean Defence Ministry spokesman said. North Korea had last fired a series of short-range missiles in the week after its May 25 nuclear test.
US, South Korea raise surveillance level over North KoreaMay 28th, 2009 SEOUL - South Korea and the US Thursday ramped up their surveillance over North Korea, as Pyongyang nullified its truce with Seoul and threatened war. The armed forces of both countries upped surveillance to the penultimate level of a five-state surveillance scale for the first time since North Korea's first nuclear test in October 2006, the South Korean Yonhap news agency reported, quoting a defence ministry official.
North Korea threatens military strike against South KoreaMay 27th, 2009 SEOUL - North Korea Wednesday warned it will respond militarily to South Korea joining a US-led initiative to intercept ships carrying illicit weapons, the South Korean Yonhap news agency said.
North Korea restarts nuclear facility: ReportMay 27th, 2009 SEOUL - North Korea appears to have restarted its nuclear reprocessing facility at Yongbyon to produce weapons-grade plutonium, a South Korean news report said Wednesday. Analysis of satellite images indicated that the facility, which had been mothballed by North Korea following a denuclearisation deal signed in February 2007, has been restarted, the Chosun Ilbo newspaper said, quoting informed sources.
North Korea fires two missiles after nuclear test (Lead)May 26th, 2009 SEOUL - North Korea fired two short-range missiles Tuesday, a day after conducting an internationally condemned nuclear test, South Korean media reported. The launches were carried out on North Korea's east coast, the national news agency Yonhap said, citing a government official in Seoul.
World powers agree UN draft statement on North KoreaApril 12th, 2009 NEW YORK - The world powers have agreed on a UN Security Council draft statement condemning North Korea's rocket launch, diplomats said Sunday. The five permanent members of the council and Japan agreed Saturday to the draft statement seen as a compromise between the supporters of tough measures against North Korea and restrained response to the communist regime's rocket launch.
North Korea threatens to shoot down South Korean planesMarch 6th, 2009 SEOUL - North Korea Thursday indirectly threatened to shoot down South Korean passenger aircraft in its airspace, amid growing tension on the Korean peninsula. North Korea's Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of Korea made the threat as the US and South Korea prepared to undertake joint military exercises next Monday.
North Korea says ready for 'all-out confrontation' with SouthFebruary 18th, 2009 PYONGYANG - North Korea Thursday said its army was ready for an 'an all-out confrontation' with South Korea, the official KCNA news agency reported. The Lee Myung-bak administration of South Korea, which is trying to find a way-out of its serious inner crisis through escalating confrontation with North Korea, will meet 'the merciless and stern punishment by the army and people of North Korea,' a military spokesman for Korean People's Army (KPA) said.
North Korea readying intercontinental missile launch: ReportsFebruary 2nd, 2009 SEOUL - North Korea is preparing to test-fire an intercontinental missile capable of carrying a nuclear warhead, South Korean media reports said Tuesday. Intelligence agencies in South Korea and the US observed a train carrying a large cylindrical object that was believed to be a Taepodong-2 missile, the South Korea news agency Yonhap reported, citing an intelligence source.
'North Korea will not quit nuclear programme under US threat'January 16th, 2009 PYONGYANG - North Korea will not give up its nuclear weapons programme under US threat, a foreign ministry spokesman said here Saturday. 'If there is something to be desired by us (North Korea), it is not normalisation of relations with the US, but to boost nuclear deterrent in every possible way,' the official KCNA news agency quoted the spokesman as saying.
September 21st, 2009 at 12:41 am
Hey! I’m glad to hear this.your posts very insightful and refreshing about the topic. Keep up the good work.