The UN Security Council has voiced “grave concern” over reports of oil trading with ISIS militant groups in Iraq and Syria. ISIS has seized control of oilfields in the area and is reportedly using the revenues to finance its nascent Islamic State.
Russia submitted a draft statement to the Security Council on Monday night that would ban crude oil sales by terrorist organizations in Syria and Iraq, and potentially sanction anyone that does business with them. The measure “strongly condemns any engagement in direct or indirect trade of oil from Syria involving terrorist groups, and reiterates that such engagement constitutes financial support for entities designated by the Security Council 1267/1989 Committee as terrorist."
The statement also calls on all member states to take
“necessary measures” to stop “nationals, entities
and individuals” from engaging in transactions linked to
non-state actors in the oil industry in Syria.
The Russia-backed statement will be discussed in the coming days
at the Security Council. If it is adopted it will be less binding
than a resolution, but will still send out a strong message to
those trading oil with the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS)
and the al-Nusra Front in Syria and Iraq.
Russia’s Permanent Ambassador to the UN, Vitaly Churkin, told
reporters that one of the main sources of finance for terrorists
in the Middle East was the sale of oil to “various
countries” through intermediaries.
“We know that terrorist organizations are doing illegal oil
trading from the territories of both Syria and Iraq,” he
said. Commenting on the Security Council meeting on Monday,
Churkin said the US had pushed for the wording to be changed in
the statement.
“We had bilateral negotiations with the United States and the
American delegation did everything they could to dilute the
wording of the document. We would have preferred a much stronger
statement,” said the diplomat.
The UN Security Council statement comes after ISIS militants
overran four small oilfields in northern Iraq last month. Reports
have emerged that after taking control of the facilities, ISIS
militants began sending the crude oil over to neighboring Syria
to be processed and then sold.
The militant Sunni organization then uses the revenues from the
oil sales to finance the newly-formed Islamic State, which spans
the border region between Syria and northern Iraq. ISIS began
seizing vast swathes of northern Iraq last month, starting with
the country’s second-largest city, Mosul.
The group has promised to take the fight to Baghdad and has
accused Shiite Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki of discriminating
against Iraq’s Sunni minority.