Home MOREBUSINESS & ECONOMY Iran Sanctions: UK, France & Germany (E3) to transpose UN sanctions into national law

Iran Sanctions: UK, France & Germany (E3) to transpose UN sanctions into national law

by EUToday Correspondents
0 comment
Iran sanctions
Iran sanctions: UK has committed to bringing UN sanctions on Iran due to lift in October into UK law, with France and Germany following step.
  • UK, France and Germany (E3) to transfer UN sanctions on Iran into domestic regimes and maintain existing EU/UK sanctions beyond October deadline included in nuclear deal.
  • E3 taking ‘legitimate and proportionate’ action in response to Iranian regime breaching commitments under the nuclear deal and advancing its nuclear programme beyond all credible civilian justification.
  • UK and partners remain committed to preventing Iran from developing nuclear weapons.

Under the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPoA), a range of UN, EU and UK sanctions were due to be lifted on October 18th. These include sanctions on individuals and entities involved in Iran’s missile, nuclear, and other weapons programs.

In response to continued Iranian non-compliance with their JCPoA commitments and ongoing nuclear escalation, the E3 have confirmed today that the UN sanctions will be transferred into domestic sanctions regimes and the EU and UK sanctions will be maintained.

Today’s actions do not violate the JCPoA and are fully consistent with the procedures defined within it. Iran has consistently breached its obligations under the JCPoA. The regime’s enriched uranium stockpiles are more than 18 times the JCPoA limit and it has built and deployed thousands of advanced centrifuges.

In March last year and again in August, the E3 partners offered Iran viable deals that would have defused the nuclear issue. On both occasions Iran declined.

The E3 partners remain “committed to preventing Iran from developing nuclear weapons, including through the snapback process if necessary.”

More Iran coverage on EU Today

The E3 triggered the JCPoA’s Dispute Resolution Mechanism (DRM) in January 2020 in response to Iranian non-compliance to try to find a solution. The DRM process is supposed to allow 30 days to resolve outstanding issues; it has been over three and a half years and Iran remains out of compliance.

According to Paragraph 36 of the JCPoA, these unresolved issues are grounds to cease performing part of our commitments.

———————————————————————————————————————————–

 

Follow EU Today on social media:

Twitter:    @EU_today  

                   @EU_sports

Facebook:   https://www.facebook.com/EUtoday.net/ 

                      https://www.facebook.com/groups/968799359934046

YouTube:    https://www.youtube.com/@eutoday1049

You may also like

Leave a Comment

2131

EU Today brings you the latest news and commentary from across the EU and beyond. 

Editors' Picks

Latest Posts