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News ID: 93003
Publish Date : 03 August 2021 - 22:02

Iran Starts Legal Action Against Bahrain Over Seized Funds

TEHRAN - The central Bank of Iran (CBI) has announced it has started taking legal action against a court ruling in Bahrain to confiscate funds belonging to the CBI and other Iranian banks under allegations of money laundering.
The Tuesday statement by the CBI said that its complaint will be based on a 2004 agreement between Iran and Bahrain which is aimed at encouraging and boosting mutual investment in the two countries.
“The CBI ... started its legal action against the Bahraini government on August 2, 2021 to demand the repatriation of the (Iranian) funds invested in banks in that country,” said the statement.
Bahrain’s High Criminal Court issued a verdict on July 29 to confiscate nearly $1.3 billion worth of Iranian funds in the country, according to a report by the official BNA news agency.
The funds belong to the Future Bank, a joint commercial entity that was closed down in 2016 after Iran and Bahrain cut their diplomatic relations.
The Bahraini ruling claims that Iran’s Bank Melli and Bank Saderat who control the majority of shares in the Future Bank have been engaged in money-laundering activities in recent years to benefit the CBI and other Iranian entities.

Anti-Iran Verdict Lacks
Judicial Value

Iran has dismissed the case, saying it lacks any legal merit and is simply an attempt to confiscate Iranian funds in the Future Bank under fabricated allegations.
CBI’s Tuesday statement said that the lender had withdrawn a bulk of the Iranian funds in the Future Bank in 2015 in anticipation of deteriorating diplomatic relations with Bahrain.
However, it said that Bahraini banks have refused to return the rest of the funds since then while rejecting CBI’s repeated requests to use them for funding humanitarian missions to help Iran avoid US sanctions targeting its banking system.
Bahrain’s High Criminal Court accused the CBI, along with a number of other Iranian banks and their officials, in addition to the Manama-based Future Bank and six of its officials, of being involved in what it claimed as “money laundering.”
Bahrain’s public prosecutor has sentenced the defendants to various terms of imprisonment as well as financial punishment.
The court sentenced Future Bank
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