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Iran's Bank Mellat Wins Ruling Over Treasury

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  • Iran's Bank Mellat Wins Ruling Over Treasury

    IRAN'S BANK MELLAT WINS RULING OVER TREASURY

    Daily Telegraph
    3:47PM GMT 24 Feb 2010
    UK

    Bank Mellat, the privately owned Iranian bank accused of providing
    financial services to companies engaged in the country's nuclear and
    ballistic missile programmes, has won a "human rights" legal victory
    in the High Court.

    The bank is fighting to overturn a Treasury order stopping all
    financial companies doing business with it. The Treasury acted "to
    hamper Iran's nuclear and ballistic missile programmes" by shutting
    out Bank Mellat from the financial sector.

    Mr Justice Mitting, sitting in London, declared on Wednesday that,
    in its legal battle with the Treasury, the bank was entitled under
    the European Convention on Human Rights to be treated in the same
    way as an individual terror suspect challenging a control order.

    Chinese businessman accused of using New York banks to buy Iran
    materials to make nuclear weaponsBank Mellat was entitled to sufficient
    information about the allegations being made against it to ensure a
    fair hearing.

    The judge said he was giving Government lawyers permission to appeal
    because of the importance of his decision.

    The Treasury made the order under the 2008 Counter-Terrorism Act last
    October, and the bank is seeking to have it set aside on a number
    of grounds.

    In a preliminary hearing, the judge was asked to decide whether Article
    6(1) of the human rights convention, which protects the right to a
    fair hearing, applied to the proceedings.

    It is a key issue as it determines the extent to which the Treasury has
    to disclose to the bank its grounds for seeking to uphold the order.

    Jonathan Swift QC argued on behalf of the Treasury that Article 6(1)
    did not apply because the order under challenge was directed at UK
    credit or financial institutions and did not directly determine the
    bank's civil rights or obligations.

    The judge said the difficulty for the Treasury was in the evidence
    supporting the order.

    The Treasury said it was satisfied that Bank Mellat had "provided
    financial services to companies engaged in Iran's nuclear and ballistic
    missile programmes".

    It also stated the purpose of the order was "to hamper Iran's nuclear
    and ballistic missile programmes by shutting out Bank Mellat from the
    UK financial sector - perhaps restricting its access to the global
    financial system as well".

    The judge ruled: "Thus the target of the order is Bank Mellat: it
    will not serve its purpose unless Bank Mellat is cut off."

    He said the order directly impinged "on the bank's civil rights and
    obligations" and Article 6(1) did apply.

    The judge referred to a landmark decision of the House of Lords in
    June last year in the case of "AF", a terror suspect challenging a
    control order that restricted his movements.

    The law lords ruled AF "must be given sufficient information about
    the essential allegations against him" so that he could give effective
    instructions to his legal advisers and receive a fair trial.

    The judge said an order he had made for disclosure "was intended
    only to ensure that the bank had the opportunity of giving effective
    instructions about the essential allegations against it".

    The court heard Bank Mellat has branches throughout Iran and in Turkey
    and South Korea, as well as subsidiaries in Malaysia, Armenia and
    the UK.

    It owns 60pc of the shares in Persia International Bank (PIB),
    through which it conducts most of its UK business.

    A substantial part of that business is issuing letters of credit,
    for which PIB acts as the advising and reimbursing bank.

    The gross value of letters of credit issued in this way was about
    [email protected] in 2008 and ~@970m in the first half of 2009.

    At the time the Treasury order was made, the bank had approximately
    ~@185m in call/current and time deposit accounts with PIB.

    The effect of the order was to prevent all persons operating in the
    financial sector, including PIB, from taking part in any transaction
    with the bank.
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