US prosecutors accuse Turkey’s Halkbank of evading Iran sanctions

The indictment by US prosecutors does not help US-Turkey ties, says a Turkish official in Washington.

Halkbank Turkey
Halkbank, which is majority owned by the Turkish government, has become a casualty in the widening rift between the US and Turkey [File: Murad Sezer/Reuters]

United States prosecutors charged Turkey‘s majority state-owned Halkbank with taking part in a multibillion-dollar scheme to evade US sanctions against Iran – an indictment that may complicate tensions between NATO allies Washington and Ankara.

The charges, unsealed in federal court in Manhattan, mirror those against one of Halkbank’s former executives, Mehmet Hakan Atilla, who was found guilty and sentenced to prison after a trial in the same court last year.

Halkbank could not immediately be reached for comment after business hours in Turkey. A US lawyer for the bank declined to comment.

The US and Turkey are at odds over Turkey’s military offensive into northeastern Syria against Kurdish-led militia. US President Donald Trump announced a set of sanctions on Monday to punish Ankara for the action.

US Vice President Mike Pence will meet with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Ankara on Thursday to urge a ceasefire and emphasise the Trump administration’s commitment to sanctions until a resolution is reached, the White House said.

“This indictment constitutes an additional step that does not contribute positively to the current situation of US-Turkey relations,” an official at the Turkish embassy in Washington told the Reuters news agency.

The economic impact on Turkey could be severe, resulting in heavy fines and possible currency depreciation, Kyron Huigens, a professor at Cardozo School of Law in New York, told Al Jazeera.

“The fines under US law are typically tied into the amounts of money involved and the crime. Here, that’s $20bn, so we really are looking at fines on the bank in the billions,” Huigens said.

He added that the government could also be affected as it owns a majority of Halkbank’s shares.

“The currency of Turkey was affected when the individuals were prosecuted [last year] and one of them was convicted, and certainly the currency is going to take a hit again,” he said.

“All of these things ripple through the wider economy. So if you look at other countries that have been under these types of sanctions, it does have an extreme effect. Whether it’ll have any effect on the situation in northern Syria is debatable [because] the case is going to take a long time to bring to completion,” Huigens added. 

Turkey began its cross-border operation just days after Erdogan told Trump in a phone call on October 6 that he would go ahead with a long-planned move against US-allied Kurds in the region, opening a fresh front in Syria’s eight-year civil war.

Trump moved US forces out of the way, an abrupt policy change after years of American troops fighting alongside the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) against ISIL.

Tuesday’s indictment is the latest development in a US criminal case that first became public in 2016 with the arrest in Miami of Reza Zarrab, a Turkish-Iranian gold trader accused of playing a central role in the sanctions evasion scheme. Atilla, a Halkbank deputy general manager, was arrested in New York the following year.

Zarrab pleaded guilty and testified for US prosecutors at Atilla’s trial. Zarrab said that Iran, with the help of Halkbank and Turkish government officials including Erdogan, used a complex web of shell companies and sham transactions in gold, food and medicine to get around US sanctions.

US prosecutors said some officials took bribes as part of the scheme.

The prosecutors are seeking to compel Halkbank to forfeit money and property, though they did not give a specific amount.

Atilla was sentenced to 32 months in prison following his conviction. He was released and returned to Turkey earlier this year. At the time of Atilla’s conviction, Erdogan condemned the case as a political attack on his government.

Gold trader Zarrab, before pleading guilty, hired Rudy Giuliani, a longtime associate of Trump, to try to negotiate a deal between the US and Turkish governments to secure his release.

Giuliani has more recently attracted attention as Trump’s personal lawyer. Federal prosecutors are examining Giuliani’s interactions with two men he worked with in Ukraine who were arrested last week on campaign finance charges.

Giuliani also said on Tuesday that he would not cooperate with the Democratic-led US House of Representatives impeachment inquiry into Republican Trump’s efforts to pressure Ukraine to investigate Democratic political rival Joe Biden. 

Source: Al Jazeera, News Agencies

Advertisement