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News ID: 45175
Publish Date : 11 October 2017 - 20:20

Courts Issue $110 Billion Verdicts Against U.S.




TEHRAN (Dispatches) -- Three hundred verdicts have been issued against the United States in different courts of law in the province of Tehran, the head of the local justice department, Gholam Hussein Esmaeili, has announced.
Based on the final verdicts, Esmaeili said, "The U.S. should pay a $110 billion penalty and compensation to Iranians who have suffered from sanctions ‘illegally’ imposed on Tehran by Washington.”
Earlier this year, the Iranian Parliament authorized the judiciary to establish special courts to arbitrate on claims of complainants who suffered from "illegal sanctions imposed by the United States” or "America’s adventurist terrorist actions in the region."
Esmaeili announced the news on a TV show, the Mehr news agency reported.
He also asserted the verdicts were issued in a "particular” form that is "applicable in international forums.”
Elaborating further, he said, the verdicts had an impact on negotiations for the release or swapping of prisoners.
Though Esmaeili did not disclose the nature of the swap or the "impact” of "verdicts” on it, but in passing he referred to returning "some Iranian money that was unfairly kept in the United States."
Apparently, he was referring to the Obama administration, which arranged for a plane delivery of $400 million in cash, on the same day Tehran released four prisoners as it formally implemented the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, JCPOA, or Iran’s nuclear deal with world powers.
According to CNN, President Barack Obama approved the $400 million transfer, which he had announced in January 2016 as part of the Iran nuclear deal.
The money was flown into Iran on wooden pallets stacked with Swiss francs, euros, and other currencies as the first installment of a $1.7 billion settlement resolving claims at an international tribunal at The Hague over a failed arms deal going back to the reign of the Shah.
Esmaeili’s comments are published at a time when Iran awaits President’s Trump’s crucial decision on certifying or "decertifying” JCPOA.
Congress requires the president to certify Iranian compliance with the deal every 90 days. The next certification date is October 15.
Analysts believe that if Trump decides against certifying Iranian compliance with JCPOA, it will not immediately kill it but push it closer to the verge of collapse.
"Decertifying” Iran’s commitment to the deal will pave the way for Congress to possibly authorize more restrictive measures against Iran.