US imposes fresh sanctions on Iranian individuals, companies amid coronavirus

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Updated 26 March 2020
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US imposes fresh sanctions on Iranian individuals, companies amid coronavirus

WASHINGTON: The United States on Thursday blacklisted 20 Iran- and Iraq-based companies, officials and individuals, accusing them of supporting terrorist groups and ramping up pressure on Tehran even as the Islamic Republic battles the coronavirus outbreak.
The US Treasury Department said in a statement that the individuals and entities supported Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) and its elite foreign paramilitary and espionage arm, the Quds Force, as well as transferred lethal aid to Iran-backed militias in Iraq, including Kataib Hezbollah and Asaib Ahl Al-Haq.
Treasury said the people and entities were involved in smuggling weapons to Iraq and Yemen and selling US-blacklisted Iranian oil to the Syrian government, among other activities.
The sanctions freeze any US-held assets of those designated and generally bar Americans from doing business with them.
“Iran employs a web of front companies to fund terrorist groups across the region, siphoning resources away from the Iranian people and prioritizing terrorist proxies over the basic needs of its people,” Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said in the statement.


Iraq: Ankara agrees to take back Turkish citizens among Daesh detainees transferred from Syria

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Iraq: Ankara agrees to take back Turkish citizens among Daesh detainees transferred from Syria

Iraq’s foreign minister said on Monday Turkiye had agreed to take back Turkish citizens from among thousands of ​Islamic State detainees transferred to Iraq from Syria when camps and prisons there were shut in recent weeks.
Iraq took in the detainees in an operation arranged with the United States after Kurdish forces retreated and shut down camps and prisons which had housed Islamic ‌State suspects ‌for nearly a decade.
Baghdad has ​said ‌it ⁠will ​try suspects ⁠on terrorism charges in its own legal system, but it has also repeatedly called on other countries to take back their citizens from among the detainees.
Foreign Minister Fuad Hussein told US envoy Tom Barrack in a meeting that Iraq ⁠was in talks with other countries on ‌the repatriation of ‌their nationals, and had reached ​an agreement with Turkiye.
In ‌a separate statement to the UN Human ‌Rights Council, Hussein said: “We would call the states across the world to recover their citizens who’ve been involved in terrorist acts so that they be tried ‌in their countries of origin.”
The fate of the suspected Islamic State fighters, ⁠as well ⁠as thousands of women and children associated with the group, has become an urgent issue since the Kurdish force guarding them collapsed in the face of a Syrian government offensive.
At the height of its power from 2014-2017, Islamic State held swathes of Syria and Iraq in a self-proclaimed caliphate, ruling over millions of people and attracting fighters from other countries. ​Its rule collapsed ​after military campaigns by regional governments and a US-led coalition.