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Jail for pair over falsified records after transfer of oil to vessel believed to be North Korea-flagged

Thursday, 23 February 2023 | 17:00

A Singapore-registered tanker transferred oil to a vessel, believed to be North Korea-flagged, even though United Nations Security Council (UNSC) resolutions prohibit such transactions.

The prosecution said that three Singaporean men then worked together to present a false narrative on the movement of the Singapore-registered MT Sea Tanker II by falsifying its logbooks, which were then presented to the authorities.

At the time of the offences, Ong Chou Hong, Benny Tan Chun Kiat and Jeremy Koh Renfeng were working for a firm called Sea Hub Tankers that owned and operated MT Sea Tanker II.

Ong was then an assistant marine superintendent, while Tan and Koh were cargo officers.
On Monday, Ong, 33, was sentenced to nine months’ jail after he pleaded guilty to two counts of obstructing the course of justice.

Tan, 47, admitted to one count of a similar offence, and was ordered to spend six months behind bars.

The case involving Koh, 40, is pending.

Deputy Public Prosecutor David Koh said that as a member state of the UN, Singapore is obliged to implement the UNSC sanctions and its respective resolutions on North Korea to counter its nuclear weapons programme.

According to images of items, including a report, taken from Koh’s mobile phone, MT Sea Tanker II had transferred oil to a vessel called “MT An San I” – believed to be North Korea-flagged – in October 2018.

The report was signed off by a chief officer from one “Ansan Shipping Company”, believed to be a North Korean shipping company.
This transfer to MT An San I was not recorded in items such as MT Sea Tanker II’s official logbook.

In late 2018, the Singapore authorities received information alleging that MT Sea Tanker II had engaged in a ship-to-ship transfer with a North Korea-flagged vessel.

On Nov 5, 2018, the Maritime and Port Authority requested from Sea Hub Tankers documents including MT Sea Tanker II’s official logbook.

Some time between Nov 5 and Dec 6, 2018, Ong and Tan gave instructions to Koh, who was then on board the vessel, that the records in MT Sea Tanker II’s official logbook had to be rewritten.

According to court documents, the trio agreed on a purported timeline for the movement of MT Sea Tanker II.

In November 2018, Ong informed Koh that Tan would be bringing a new computer processing unit (CPU) to the ship.

He instructed Koh to destroy the old CPU containing records pertaining to MT Sea Tanker II’s activities.

DPP Koh said: “Later… Koh informed Ong that the crew had backed up their files, and that he would be throwing the (old) CPU into the sea.”

The truth emerged after investigators retrieved images from Koh’s mobile phone.

Ong’s lawyer, Mr Baburam Dayalan Naidu from H. A. & Chung Partnership, told the court on Monday that his client had committed the offences due to a sense of misguided loyalty to Sea Hub Tankers, a company that had put him through school in certificate courses with Singapore Polytechnic while he was working for it.

Tan and Ong were each offered bail of $10,000 on Monday.

They are expected to surrender themselves at the State Courts on March 20 to begin serving their sentences.
Source: The Straits Times

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