Pompeo says ‘no sanctions’ prevent Covid-19 aid to
Iran, as US blocks $5bn IMF loan & ignores calls to lift penalties
8
Apr, 2020 23:49
FILE PHOTO: A volunteer wearing a protective suit and
face mask sprays disinfectant as he sanitizes a bus station in Tehran,
Iran. © Reuters / West Asia News Agency / Ali Khara
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said a raft of US
sanctions do not stop humanitarian aid from reaching Tehran, even as the UN and
rights groups say the penalties are crippling Iran’s healthcare system.
“I’ve heard people talking about sanctions. The world
should know there are no sanctions that prevent humanitarian assistance,
medical supplies, pharmaceuticals from going to Iran,” Pompeo told reporters at a White House briefing
on Wednesday, adding that the US offered to send aid but Iran refused.
Tehran has repeatedly slammed the US pressure campaign
– which makes effectively impossible the bank transactions necessary to
purchase vital supplies from overseas – deeming it a “historical
disgrace” and “economic terrorism” that only
complicates efforts to contain the fast-moving epidemic.
Pompeo’s dismissal comes as the State Department
protested Iran’s request for a $5 billion emergency loan from the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) to fight the coronavirus, which has so far infected over
64,000 Iranians and killed almost 4,000.
After the head of Iran’s central bank, Abdolnaser
Hemmati, wrote asking for the urgently needed funds due to the “widespread
prevalence” of Covid-19 inside Iran, Foggy Bottom responded by
insisting that Washington is “against allocating any loan to Iran” and
that the country has sufficient resources to combat the virus on its own.
Some of Washington’s European allies have sidestepped
US sanctions and sent medical supplies to Iran this week. Asked about this, US
President Donald Trump said that the deliveries “don’t bother” him,
but ruled out lifting or easing the sanctions.
The United Nations and other humanitarian bodies have
repeatedly urged Washington to ease its sanctions amid the health crisis, with
the UN Human Rights Commissioner Michelle Bachelet warning they were “impeding
medical efforts” and could lead to the “collapse” of
Iran’s healthcare system.
Last week, a group of 24 former senior diplomats –
including four retired NATO chiefs – also urged the US to ease its sanctions on
the Islamic Republic, arguing it could potentially save “hundreds of
thousands of lives” there.
“US ‘maximum pressure’ through sanctions on Iran are
compromising the performance of the Iranian healthcare system as Iran’s
outbreak moves into its second month,” the European and American diplomats said in
a statement on Sunday.
Pandemic or not, Washington has refused to relax its
policy on either Iran or Venezuela where the coronavirus has also taken hold in
recent weeks. The US Treasury department slapped additional sanctions on a
number of Iranian firms in late March – accusing them of aiding terrorism –
while the Department of Justice recently indicted Venezuelan President Nicolas
Maduro on “narco-terrorism” charges as the US Navy embarked on
an anti-narcotics mission off the country’s coast.
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