Philippines Coast Guard officials
inspect North Korean freighter Jin Teng in Subic Bay in this handout
photo from the coast guard on March 3, 2016.
Reuters/Philippines Coast Guard via Reuters/Handout via Reuters
The Philippines
has released a North Korean freighter it seized nearly a month ago under
tough new U.N. sanctions, after no contraband was found onboard and the
ship was cleared by the United Nations, officials said on Friday.The
M/V Jin Teng, a 6,830 deadweight tonne (dwt) cargo ship with its 21
North Korean crew, left on Thursday afternoon for China after clearing
immigration, customs, quarantine and port authorities, said coastguard
spokesman Commander Armand Balilo.
"At
the policy level, there is no more basis to continue to hold M/V Jin
Teng after U.N. Security Council delisted it from the annex of UNSC
Resolution 2270," Charles Jose, a foreign ministry spokesman, said in a
text message.
No team from the
United Nations came to inspect the ship but local authorities did not
find any contraband on board except some broken aids to navigation
equipment, the coastguard said.
Tough new U.N.
sanctions, passed in March to punish North Korea after its fourth
nuclear test in January, blacklisted 31 ships owned by North Korean
shipping firm Ocean Maritime Management Company (OMM). The sanctions aim
to starve North Korea of money for its nuclear weapons program.
But
the U.N. Security Council agreed earlier this week to China's request
to remove sanctions on four ships blacklisted for ties to Pyongyang's
arms trade. China said the ships were not OMM ships and secured a
commitment that the ships would no longer use North Korean crews.
The four ships included the Jin Teng, detained by the Philippines days after the sanctions took effect.
Jin Teng, flying a Sierra Leone flag, arrived in the Philippines on Feb. 27 and was unloading palm kernels when it was seized.
The Jin Teng has
called at Palembang, Indonesia, and Kaohsiung, Taiwan, since the
beginning of this year, ship tracking data available on the Reuters
Eikon Terminal showed.
(Reporting By Manuel Mogato; Editing by Michael Perry)
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