Turkey holds plane en route to Iran
2013-01-09 20:43
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Ankara - Turkey has been holding for several days a cargo
plane en route from the United Arab Emirates (UAE) to Iran after its crew
refused to document its load, a customs ministry official told AFP on Wednesday.
"The plane owned by a Turkish company had to make an
emergency landing at Istanbul's Sabiha Gokcen Airport due to technical
reasons," the official said on condition of anonymity.
"The company has to document its cargo at our
customs until 10:00 [Wednesday], for security purposes otherwise we'll do
what's necessary," he added, without elaborating.
The official said that Turkish authorities would have the
right to check the plane's cargo if the company refused to reveal the items on
board.
"It is most probably carrying gold," he
speculated.
An official from the Iranian embassy in Ankara told AFP
that they had not been informed by the Turkish foreign ministry of the plane's
grounding.
"Authorities will take necessary steps if there is
any irregularity in the conduct of business," another Turkish official
said.
But officials declined to comment if the cargo of the
plane was documented before the given time and if the plane was allowed to
resume its journey.
The incident comes amid indirect gold trade between
Turkey and Iran, with the trade to settle Turkish imports of Iranian natural
gas reportedly being done via UAE to bypass US-led sanctions against Tehran.
Turkey could have faced recession if it was not for the
boom in exports, particularly in gold sales to Iran, Economy Minister Zafer
Caglayan said in December.
"Turkey ships 60% of its gold to Iran and [the] rest
to the UAE and other countries. But we are not Iran's only market," the
minister added.
Turkey sold $6.5bn worth of gold to Iran and another $4.2bn
worth to the UAE in the first 11 months of 2012.
Nuclear programme
Ankara is under severe pressure from its Western allies
to reduce imports of natural gas from Iran owing to Tehran's disputed nuclear
programme.
Fearing that Tehran aims to acquire nuclear weapons, the
US has led Western powers to impose ever tougher sanctions against Iran which
rejects the charge outright, insisting its programme is for peaceful purposes
only.
Under a law approved last year, Washington threatened to
penalise foreign financial institutions over transactions with Iran's central
bank, which handles sales of the country's key oil and gas exports.
On 30 November, the US Senate unanimously approved new
economic sanctions aimed at further crippling Iran's energy, shipping and port
sectors.
But shortly thereafter, Washington extended exemptions
from the sanctions to nine major economic powers, including Turkey, China,
Taiwan, India and South Korea.
Ankara in return has cut its Iranian oil purchases by 20%.
Energy Minister Taner Yildiz said last month Turkey met
half of its crude oil needs from Iran in 2011 but was now trying to source more
from Libya, Saudi Arabia and Russia.
But Turkey expects the latest round of US sanctions
against Tehran will not cover natural gas imports.
Iran is Turkey's second-biggest natural gas supplier
after Russia, and third biggest in oil.
Iran's economy is struggling to cope with tightening
sanctions imposed by the US and the EU over the past two years.
Turkey says it is bound only by UN sanctions against
Iran, and Turkish officials insist that Turkey will keep buying natural gas
from Iran which supplies up to 20% of the gas it consumes.