Skip to main content
Best News Website or Mobile Service
WAN-IFRA Digital Media Awards Worldwide 2022
Best News Website or Mobile Service
Digital Media Awards Worldwide 2022
Hamburger Menu

Advertisement

Advertisement

World

US offers US$5 million reward for Singaporean over North Korea oil shipments

US offers US$5 million reward for Singaporean over North Korea oil shipments

A photo of Kwek Kee Seng. (Photo: Rewards for Justice)

WASHINGTON: The Biden administration is offering a reward of up to US$5 million for information about a Singapore-based businessman already accused by the Justice Department of facilitating fuel shipments to North Korea in violation of UN sanctions.

Kwek Kee Seng, who owns the Swanseas Port Services shipping company in Singapore, was charged last year with arranging the deliveries, with prosecutors alleging that he used front companies and false documentation to hide the scheme. Officials say that business helps enable North Korea's nuclear proliferation programmes.

The US government seized a tanker ship that was used for the fuel deliveries, the 2,734-tonne M/T Courageous, prosecutors have said. One exchange caught on satellite imagery showed the ship transferring more than US$1.5 million worth of oil to a North Korea-flagged ship, the prosecutors said.

Kwek, 62, remains at large despite a warrant that has been issued for his arrest.

This image released by the FBI shows the wanted poster for Kwek Kee Seng. (Image: FBI via AP)

The State Department's Rewards for Justice programme said his exact location was not known and that he has also been identified as being in North Korea, Cambodia, Taiwan and Thailand as well as Cameroon and the tiny Caribbean nation of Saint Kitts and Nevis.

The State Department on Thursday said it was offering up to US$5 million through its Rewards for Justice programme. Kwek was also among a group of people and firms sanctioned last month by the Treasury Department.

The announcement of a reward came amid heightened tensions with North Korea, which on Thursday fired at least six missiles into the sea, including an intercontinental ballistic missile that triggered evacuation warnings and halted trains in northern Japan.

The Biden administration said in response to the launches that it is willing to take “all necessary measures” to ensure the safety of the American homeland as well as South Korea and Japan, and warned of unspecified “additional costs and consequences” if North Korea detonates a nuclear test device for the first time since September 2017.

The Singapore Police Force said it is unable to comment on the case as investigations are ongoing. 

Source: Agencies/ec

Advertisement

Also worth reading

Advertisement