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Europe Should Ban Entry of Indian Petroleum Products: EU Foreign Minister

Europe Should Ban Entry of Indian Petroleum Products: EU Foreign Minister

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NEW DELHI, May 16: Hours before his meeting in Brussels with External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar, the European Union’s (EU) Foreign Minister Josep Borrell on Tuesday said Europe should ban the entry of refined petroleum products from India made from Russian oil.

The government reacted by denying that it was violating sanctions and said it was not possible to fully identify the origins of petroleum products being sold in Europe.

Borrell’s remarks were made in a media interview in which the Minister said it was “certainly a circumvention of sanctions” if Indian diesel and gasoline (petrol) entering Europe were made from Russian oil and that EU Member States “have to act.” The media report said as per Borrell, Brussels “was aware that Indian refiners were buying large volumes of Russian crude oil before processing it into fuels for sale in Europe.”

Borrell said it was “normal” that India was buying cheap Russian oil following the G-7 price cap of $60 per barrel but it was not acceptable for that oil to be routed to Europe via refined products. He said if India was acting as a “centre” where Russian oil was being refined and products being sold to the EU, then “we [the EU] have to act.”

Government sources dismissed the charge that India was circumventing sanctions, saying that the government had no knowledge of such sales. “We are not selling the oil abroad — this is being done by private entities and oil refineries that make commercial decisions. It is also not possible to tell whether these products being sold to Europe are being traded on the high seas, or even coming from India,” a source said.

Earlier this month, the Petroleum and Natural Gas Ministry strongly denied a Finland-based think tank’s report alleging that India led five countries that acted as “Laundromats” to buy Russian oil and sell refined products to European countries.

In a statement, the Ministry called the report “misleading” and a “deceptive effort to tarnish India’s image.” It added that as a sovereign country, India was free to import or export goods and commodities.

(Manas Dasgupta)

 

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