Iran says selling oil through ‘unconventional’ means

Iran is keeping up oil sales through
“unconventional” means to circumvent US sanctions, Oil Minister Bijan Namdar
Zanganeh said in an interview published Saturday.
“We have unofficial or unconventional sales, all of
which are secret, because if they are made known America would immediately stop
them,” he said, quoted by the oil ministry’s SHANA news agency.
Zanganeh declined to give details on Iran’s oil
exports, saying he would not disclose figures until sanctions were lifted.
In May 2018, Washington withdrew from Iran’s 2015
nuclear deal with world powers that granted Tehran sanctions relief in exchange
for curbs on its atomic program.
Washington re-imposed oil sanctions on Iran last
November, but initially gave eight countries, including several allies such as
China, six-month waivers.
Iran’s oil shipments tumbled to 750,000 barrels per
day in April compared to 1.5 million in October, according to data compiled by
Bloomberg.
The White House in May ended all the waivers as part
of a “maximum pressure” campaign against Tehran.
According to Zanganeh, the US has reached an “evil
maturity” in tightening the noose on Iran’s economy using “smart sanctions.”
“The most severe organized sanctions in history are
currently being imposed on Iran,” he said.
Earlier on Saturday, Zanganeh said in an interview
published by the Iranian parliament news site ICANA that Iran has no plans to
leave the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries.