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EU firms in Iran gets legal cover from US sanctions

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Brussels: EU countries on Monday gave European firms legal cover to operate in Iran despite the US pullout from the nuclear deal, after a report that the Trump administration has rejected calls by Brussels for an exemption from sanctions.


The bloc’s foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini said the 28 countries were doing all they could to save the deal but conceded President Donald Trump’s administration could still wreck it.


US President Donald Trump withdrew from the Iran nuclear deal in May, and Washington now plans to reimpose sanctions on Tehran next month.


“Today, the (European) Council has endorsed the update of the blocking statute annex on the nuclear deal with Iran,” Mogherini told reporters in Brussels at a meeting with EU foreign ministers.


She said the European Parliament gave its consent to the statute two weeks ago.


The “blocking statute” forbids EU firms from complying with US sanctions, allowing them to recover damages from such penalties and nullifying any foreign court rulings against them.


The EU vowed to fight to preserve the Iran nuclear deal after the US withdrawal, one of many points of US-European contention.


The blocking statute is due to enter force on August 6, when the first set of US sanctions are due.


The second set is due November 4, just before US legislative elections.


The move came as the Financial Times reported that the Trump administration has rejected an EU call for an exemption from US sanctions on companies operating in Iran.


Mogherini conceded it will be tough battle to preserve the Iran nuclear agreement, which Trump’s predecessor Barack Obama sealed with Iran along with Britain, France and Germany as well as Russia and China.


“It is a difficult exercise, because the weight of the US in the global economy and the financial system is obviously relevant,” the former Italian foreign minister said.


French carmaker Renault, which does not sell cars in the US, has said it will remain in Iran despite the sanctions. — AFP


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