- Niger will not extradite Saadi Gaddafi despite 'subversive' talks violating asylum conditions
- Malaysia deports Saudi columnist accused of blasphemy, abusing Prophet
- Syria expels ambassadors of Tunisia, Libya
- Al-Qaeda assassinates intelligence official in southern Yemen
- Two foreign aid workers kidnapped from Multan held by Pakistan Taliban
- Another Tibetan monk self-immolates in protest against Chinese rule
US tightens Iran's access to international finance
Washington, Nov 7 (DPA) The US has moved to cut off all Iranian transactions routed through US banks to further tighten sanctions over the Islamic state's nuclear and other illicit activities, the US Treasury Department has announced.
Iranian banks and other institutions could previously send transactions through US banks as long as they were initiated by a non-Iranian or American bank outside the US and ended in a non-Iranian or American bank outside the US.
That practice, known as 'U-Turn' transactions, has been banned in attempt to further isolate Iran's financial sector, Stuart Levey, an undersecretary in the Treasury Department, said Thursday.
'With today's action, Iran's potential to manipulate US financial institutions has been significantly curtailed,' Levey said.
The US has sought to increase pressure on Iran by cutting it off from the global economy, and curb Iran's ability to use the international finance system to fund its alleged activities to acquire nuclear weapons capability, develop missiles and support terrorism.
Levey said in recent years banks in Europe and other countries have also been taking steps in the wake of limited UN Security Council sanctions to punish Tehran for refusing to halt uranium enrichment.
'Back in September of 2006, I could count on one hand the major banks that had cut off or dramatically reduced their business with Iran. Now there are only a few that have not done so,' Levey said.
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