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maadhav

Greedys' deal with the devil

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See a recent news article below.

A japanese co. sold centrifuge pumps (needed to make n bombs) to iran thru two french companies.

 

what the suras and the swamis and gurus of the suras need to do to avoid such things from happening?

 

such deals takes a lot of money and secrecy,

and some say, "make muslims rich and they will not become terrorists."

 

are not the greatest terrorists very rich already?

 

separating the children for up to 25 years of age (in muslim countries) from koran, hadith, mosques, and mullas can solve the problem definitely. money (or lack of it) is not the cause. this experimetn is worth doing in bharat where islam has been invaded.

 

any more thoughts on it?

 

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Washington Times

September 23, 2004

Pg. 3

 

Company Pleads To Illegally Selling Pumps To Iran

 

By Bill Gertz, The Washington Times

 

The U.S. subsidiary of a Japanese company will plead guilty to illegally shipping high-technology pumps with military applications to Iran through two French companies, The Washington Times has learned.

 

Ebara International Corp., based in Sparks, Nev., has agreed to a plea bargain related to seven criminal violations from the sale of cryogenic transfer pumps to Iran, according to Bush administration law-enforcement officials.

 

The pumps are used to move cold fluid and have applications for liquid natural gas as well as for cooling nuclear power plants.

 

The company's founder, Everett Hylton, who left the company recently, also will offer a guilty plea to separate charges of conspiracy to make false statements to investigators, the officials said.

 

Mr. Hylton falsely told investigators that pumps worth $750,000 were sold to a company in France when he knew they were being sold to an Iranian company, according to court documents in the case.

 

The company has agreed to pay a fine of $6.3 million in addition to other civil penalties of about $99,000. Mr. Hylton also will pay a $99,000 fine and receive a suspended prison sentence, the officials said.

 

It is illegal under presidential directives and U.S. export laws to sell industrial products to Iran, a nation designated as a state sponsor of terrorism by the State Department.

 

The illegal sale of pumps was first disclosed by The Times in September 2003, triggering the yearlong investigation by the Commerce Department, U.S. Customs Service and Treasury Department into the diversion of four Ebara pumps to Iran.

 

The sale was masked by company officials who said the pumps would be used by two French companies, Cryostar and Technip, officials said.

 

However, an investigation disclosed that the pumps were resold to Iran's state-owned Pars Petrochemical Co., which is building an offshore gas complex near Qatar in the southern part of Persian Gulf.

 

The officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said the plea deals are expected to be announced by the Justice Department today after a hearing before U.S. District Court Judge John Garrett Penn.

 

An investigation into the French companies' role in the pump diversion is continuing and could lead to U.S. economic sanctions against Cryostar and Technip, the officials said.

 

Spokesmen for the companies could not be reached for comment.

 

A Commerce Department official involved in the investigation said one "immediate concern" in the transfers is that the pumps can be used as part of the cooling system for Iran's nuclear reactors at Bushehr. Court documents indicate that the pumps were to be used in a petrochemical plant.

 

Iran's government recently announced that it was ignoring appeals from the International Atomic Energy Agency and will resume the processing of highly enriched uranium, which U.S. officials say will be used to make nuclear weapons.

 

Iran says its nuclear program is for making energy.

 

Court documents in the Ebara case stated that laws violated by the company included conspiracy to export four cryogenic pumps to Iran; exporting without a license; attempting to export three pumps without a license; money laundering related to payments for the pumps; and conspiracy to export technology assistance.

 

Officials said that Technip initially approached Ebara in 2000 with an offer of large cash payments if the company would export the pumps to Iran in violation of export laws.

 

Japanese executives from the parent company, Ebara Corp. Japan in Tokyo, also knew about the illegal pump sale, according to court papers.

 

Export documents used in the transactions were falsified to make it appear as if the pumps were meant to go from Technip to Cryostar, which posed as the end user of the pumps, according to court papers.

 

Japanese company officials also transferred sales proposals to its South Korean agent so that the sales could continue without the U.S. subsidiary.

 

The total pump deal was to have been worth $3.23 million and would have been supplied to Iran's South Pars Phase 4 and 5 petrochemical plants in Iran. The offshore oil project involves the construction of oil and gas platforms and 65-mile pipelines.

 

Officials said Ebara was enticed into the illegal deal by the prospect of a large cash sale.

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