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Jumat, 06 Juli 2012

Bahrain Accuses Activists of Terror, Subversion .

Bahrain accused 23 Shiite activists, including political leaders and prominent clerics, of promoting terrorism and plotting to overthrow the monarchy, a move expected to add to sectarian tensions ahead of elections in the small Gulf Arab nation.

The accusations come after a wave of arrests last month of members of the country's majority Shiite community, which has long complained of discrimination by Bahrain's Sunni leadership, despite political overhauls ushered in by King Hamad bin Isa al Khalifa. Activists say the arrests and charges against respected leaders of the community could further alienate disaffected Shiites.

Bahrain's experiment with limited democracy is often viewed as a barometer of political and sectarian tensions in the wider region, where Sunni regimes fear an expansionistic Iran and the growing clout of Shiites in Middle East affairs. Saudi Arabia, in particular, fears that instability among Bahrain's Shiites could prove a trigger point for that country's own restive Shiite minority, who live close to Bahrain in Saudi Arabia's main oil-producing region.

Bahrain is home to the U.S. Fifth Fleet, which is responsible for U.S. naval forces in the Mideast and off the coast of East Africa. Political unrest is unlikely to affect the status of the base.

On Saturday, state prosecutors announced charges against 23 men, including the heads of two splinter political groups and prominent Shiite clerics, including plotting against the king, terrorist financing, arson and sabotage.

"This sophisticated terrorist network with operations inside and outside Bahrain has undertaken and planned a systematic and layered campaign of violence and subversion aimed squarely at undermining the national security of Bahrain," said Abdulrahman al Sayed, an official at the Public Prosecutors office, in a statement.

Lawyers for the charged men weren't available for comment.

The Bahraini authorities have issued a gag order on local media about the case. They also recently banned opposition websites in the kingdom, including the site run by largest Shiite political organization in Bahrain, the Islamic National Accord Association, known as al Wefaq, which controls 17 of the 40 seats in the lower house of parliament.

In the 1990s, Bahrain, an island city-state, was plagued by widespread civil unrest by Shiites fighting Sunni-dominated security forces. Tensions calmed after King Hamad took over in 1999, instituted constitutional changes and allowed Shiite political organizations to participate in elections for the lower house of parliament, which helps shape laws in conjunction with a second body whose members are handpicked by the king.

Local human-rights activists said the crackdown was part of a wider strategy by the government to undermine an increasingly effective political opposition ahead of national elections scheduled for Oct. 23.

"The opposition is divided between participation and opposing participation in the vote. When you arrest one side of the debate, it makes it harder for the other supporters to vote without appearing to be puppets of the regime," said Nabeel Rajab, the vice president of the Bahrain Center for Human Rights, whose website has been banned in the kingdom.

On Sunday, King Hamad said in a national address that the recent arrests were necessary for national security and didn't signal a reversal of civil rights.

The government has released few details about the alleged terrorist network, and Western diplomats based in Bahrain said they didn't know what evidence the government had to support the charges.

The crackdown began with the Aug. 13 arrest of Abduljalil Al-Singace when he returned from a trip to London. Mr. Singace, named by prosecutors as a leader of the alleged terrorist network, and most of the 23 men charged with terrorism offenses, are members of Haq, or the Movement of Liberties and Democracy, a splinter group of al Wefaq.

Late-night clashes between security forces and young Shiite protesters, many of whom are unemployed and affiliated with Haq, are a frequent occurrence in Bahrain. Security forces face gangs burning tires and armed with crude Molotov cocktails.

Haq leaders said last month that they would boycott the upcoming October elections, as they did with polls held in 2006.

Last month, al Wefaq leader Sheikh Ali Salman warned that the uptick in arrests among Shiites would lead to more protests.

Colleagues of the men charged with terrorism go a step further, saying that the arrests will strengthen the extremist edge of the Shiite opposition movement. "Calling [the detained leaders] terrorists, this is something that no one believes here in Bahrain. This move shows that government does not tolerate any opposition," says Mr. Rajab, the activist. "This branch of opposition, those outside the mainstream, will now become stronger."

Write to Margaret Coker at margaret.coker@wsj.com

Kamis, 28 Juni 2012

FATF Public Statement

The Financial Action Task Force (FATF) is the global standard setting body for anti-money laundering and combating the financing of terrorism (AML/CFT). In order to protect the international financial system from ML/FT risks and to encourage greater compliance with the AML/CFT standards, the FATF identified jurisdictions that have strategic deficiencies and works with them to address those deficiencies that pose a risk to the international financial system.


Jurisdictions subject to a FATF call on its members and other jurisdictions to apply counter-measures to protect the international financial system from the on-going and substantial money laundering and terrorist financing (ML/TF) risks emanating from the jurisdictions*.

Iran
Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK)

Jurisdictions with strategic AML/CFT deficiencies that have not made sufficient progress in addressing the deficiencies or have not committed to an action plan developed with the FATF to address the deficiencies** The FATF calls on its members to consider the risks arising from the deficiencies associated with each jurisdiction, as described below.

Bolivia
Cuba**
Ethiopia
Kenya
Myanmar
Sri Lanka
Syria
Turkey


* The FATF has previously issued public statements calling for counter-measures on Iran and DPRK. Those statements are updated below.
**Cuba has not engaged with the FATF in the process.


Iran

The FATF remains concerned by Iran’s failure to meaningfully address the on-going and substantial deficiencies in its anti-money laundering and combating the financing of terrorism (AML/CFT) regime. The FATF remains particularly concerned about Iran’s failure to address the risk of terrorist financing and the serious threat this poses to the integrity of the international financial system. The FATF urges Iran to immediately and meaningfully address its AML/CFT deficiencies, in particular by criminalising terrorist financing and effectively implementing suspicious transaction reporting (STR) requirements.

The FATF reaffirms its call on members and urges all jurisdictions to advise their financial institutions to give special attention to business relationships and transactions with Iran, including Iranian companies and financial institutions. In addition to enhanced scrutiny, the FATF reaffirms its 25 February 2009 call on its members and urges all jurisdictions to apply effective counter-measures to protect their financial sectors from money laundering and financing of terrorism (ML/FT) risks emanating from Iran. FATF continues to urge jurisdictions to protect against correspondent relationships being used to bypass or evade counter-measures and risk mitigation practices and to take into account ML/FT risks when considering requests by Iranian financial institutions to open branches and subsidiaries in their jurisdiction. If Iran fails to take concrete steps to improve its AML/CFT regime, the FATF will consider calling on its members and urging all jurisdictions to strengthen counter-measures in October 2011.

Cuba

Cuba has not committed to the AML/CFT international standards, nor has it constructively engaged with the FATF. The FATF has identified Cuba as having strategic AML/CFT deficiencies that pose a risk to the international financial system. The FATF urges Cuba to develop an AML/CFT regime in line with international standards, and is ready to work with the Cuban authorities to this end.

Bolivia

Despite Bolivia’s high-level political commitment to work with the FATF and GAFISUD to address its strategic AML/CFT deficiencies, Bolivia has not made sufficient progress in implementing its action plan, and certain strategic AML/CFT deficiencies remain. Bolivia should work on addressing these deficiencies including by: (1) ensuring adequate criminalisation of money laundering (Recommendation 1); (2) adequately criminalising terrorist financing (Special Recommendation II); (3) establishing and implementing an adequate legal framework for identifying and freezing terrorist assets (Special Recommendation III); and (4) establishing a fully operational and effective Financial Intelligence Unit (Recommendation 26). The FATF encourages Bolivia to address its remaining deficiencies and continue the process of implementing its action plan, including by continuing to work on its AML/CFT legislation.

Ethiopia

Despite Ethiopia’s high-level political commitment to work with the FATF to address its strategic AML/CFT deficiencies, Ethiopia has not made sufficient progress in implementing its action plan, and certain strategic AML/CFT deficiencies remain. Ethiopia should work on addressing these deficiencies, including by: (1) adequately criminalising money laundering and terrorist financing (Recommendation 1 and Special Recommendation II); (2) establishing and implementing an adequate legal framework and procedures to identify and freeze terrorist assets (Special Recommendation III); (3) ensuring a fully operational and effectively functioning Financial Intelligence Unit (Recommendation 26); (4) raising awareness of AML/CFT issues within the law enforcement community (Recommendation 27); and (5) implementing effective, proportionate and dissuasive sanctions in order to deal with natural or legal persons that do not comply with the national AML/CFT requirements (Recommendation 17). The FATF encourages Ethiopia to address its remaining deficiencies and continue the process of implementing its action plan.

Kenya

Despite Kenya’s high-level political commitment to work with the FATF and ESAAMLG to address its strategic AML/CFT deficiencies, Kenya has not made sufficient progress in implementing its action plan, and certain strategic AML/CFT deficiencies remain. Kenya should work on addressing these deficiencies, including by: (1) adequately criminalising terrorist financing (Special Recommendation II); (2) ensuring a fully operational and effectively functioning Financial Intelligence Unit (Recommendation 26); (3) establishing and implementing an adequate legal framework for identifying and freezing terrorist assets (Special Recommendation III); (4) raising awareness of AML/CFT issues within the law enforcement community (Recommendation 27); and (5) implementing effective, proportionate and dissuasive sanctions in order to deal with natural or legal persons that do not comply with the national AML/CFT requirements (Recommendation 17). The FATF encourages Kenya to address its remaining deficiencies and continue the process of implementing its action plan, including by implementing the AML legislation and operationalising the new AML Advisory Board.

Myanmar

Myanmar has taken steps towards improving its AML/CFT regime, including by clarifying the scope of the ML offence. Despite Myanmar’s high-level political commitment to work with the FATF and APG to address its strategic AML/CFT deficiencies, Myanmar has not made sufficient progress in implementing its action plan, and certain strategic AML/CFT deficiencies remain. Myanmar should work on addressing these deficiencies, including by: (1) adequately criminalising terrorist financing (Special Recommendation II); (2) establishing and implementing adequate procedures to identify and freeze terrorist assets (Special Recommendation III); (3) further strengthening the extradition framework in relation to terrorist financing (Recommendation 35 and Special Recommendation I); (4) ensuring a fully operational and effectively functioning Financial Intelligence Unit (Recommendation 26); (5) enhancing financial transparency (Recommendation 4); and (6) strengthening customer due diligence measures (Recommendation 5). The FATF encourages Myanmar to address its remaining deficiencies and continue the process of implementing its action plan.

Sri Lanka

Despite Sri Lanka’s high-level political commitment to work with the FATF and APG to address its strategic AML/CFT deficiencies, Sri Lanka has not made sufficient progress in implementing its action plan, and certain strategic AML/CFT deficiencies remain. Sri Lanka should work on addressing these deficiencies, including by: (1) adequately criminalising money laundering and terrorist financing (Recommendation 1 and Special Recommendation II); and (2) establishing and implementing adequate procedures to identify and freeze terrorist assets (Special Recommendation III). The FATF encourages Sri Lanka to address its remaining deficiencies and continue the process of implementing its action plan, including by continuing to work on its AML/CFT legislation.

Syria

Syria has taken steps towards improving its AML/CFT regime, including by improving the ML and TF offences. Despite Syria’s high-level political commitment to work with the FATF and MENAFATF to address its strategic AML/CFT deficiencies, Syria has not made sufficient progress in implementing its action plan, and certain strategic AML/CFT deficiencies remain Syria should work on addressing its deficiencies, including by: (1) adopting adequate measures to implement and enforce the 1999 International Convention for the Suppression of Financing of Terrorism (Special Recommendation I); (2) implementing adequate procedures for identifying and freezing terrorist assets (Special Recommendation III); (3) ensuring financial institutions are aware of and comply with their obligations to file suspicious transaction reports in relation to ML and FT (Recommendation 13 and Special Recommendation IV); and (4) ensuring appropriate laws and procedures are in place to provide mutual legal assistance (Recommendations 36-38, Special Recommendation V). The FATF encourages Syria to address its remaining deficiencies and continue the process of implementing its action plan.

Turkey

Turkey has taken steps towards improving its AML/CFT regime, including by working on CFT legislation. Despite Turkey’s high-level political commitment to work with the FATF to address its strategic AML/CFT deficiencies, Turkey has not made sufficient progress in implementing its action plan, and certain strategic AML/CFT deficiencies remain. Turkey should work on addressing these deficiencies, including by: (1) adequately criminalising terrorist financing (Special Recommendation II); and (2) implementing an adequate legal framework for identifying and freezing terrorist assets (Special Recommendation III). The FATF encourages Turkey to address its remaining deficiencies and continue the process of implementing its action plan.

Source: FATF

Rabu, 27 Juni 2012

Terror Cell Uncovered in Canada

Three people have been arrested in Canada as part of an alleged hometown plot.

Hiva Mohammad Alizadeh, 30, and Misbahuddin Ahmed, 26, residents of Canadian capital Ottawa were arrested on Wednesday and made a brief court appearance on Thursday. Police have said that they expect more arrests.

The Toronto Star reported on a third arrest in the case, this time of a man who appeared on “Canadian Idol”, Canada’s version of the popular television program “American Idol”, in 2008.

Khuram Sher, 28, was arrested in London, Ontario, in connection to the terror plot. Sher is a 2005 graduate of the McGill medical school in Montreal. In 2006, he visited Pakistan during relief efforts after an earthquake in Kashmir. He auditioned unsuccessfully for “Canadian Idol” in 2008, where he told judges he was originally from Pakistan and came to Canada in 2005.

The suspects are charged in connection with a plot to make and detonate improvised explosive devices as well as financing terror groups operating in Afghanistan.

Canadian police said on Thursday that the terrorist cell was based in Ottawa and had international connections. The cell was only reportedly months away from exploding bombs on Canadian soil, said a senior police official.

Police allege that the three men have been conspiring since February 2008 with three others in a terrorist plot traced back to Iran, Pakistan and Dubai.

Chief Superintendent Serge Therriault, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police chief of criminal operations said police seized more than 50 electronic circuit boards that could be used to produce improvised explosive devices, similar to lethal bombs that have been involved in the majority of deaths and injuries of Canadian soldiers in Afghanistan.

“This group posed a real and serious threat to the citizens of the national capital region and Canada’s national security,” Therriault said.

Alizadeh faces charges of making or possessing explosive devices for terrorist purposes and terrorist financing. According to police, he is an active member of an unnamed terrorist group.

“Part of the decision to make the arrests at this time was to prevent the suspect from providing financial support to terrorist counterparts for the purchase of weapons which would in turn be used against coalition forces and our troops (in Afghanistan),” said Therriault.

Alizadeh and Misbahuddin were remanded in custody until they make a video court appearance next Wednesday.

Sher’s relatives reacted in shock to his arrest. "He was always joking around. He was a contestant on Canadian Idol. He's such a great guy," said Mariam Wasty, Sher’s cousin, to Postmedia News. "I don't know why he'd be connected to this."

Khurram Sher's uncle, Rafat Syed said: "Oh my god, impossible. He's not that type of person. You must be joking.”
Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper said Thursday that terror networks have a global reach: “They exist not only in remote countries but through globalization and the Internet, they have links in our country and all through the world,” he said.

Selasa, 26 Juni 2012

JP Morgan pays $88.5m to settle sanction violations

JP Morgan Chase has agreed with the US Treasury Department to pay $88.3m (£54.2m) to avoid liability for "apparent violations" of sanctions against Cuba, Sudan, Liberia and Iran.

The Treasury said such violations, which took place between March 2005 and March 2011, were "egregious".

These included processing 1,711 transfers totalling $178.5m to Cubans in contravention of US regulations.

JP Morgan said there had been no intention to violate regulations.

"The firm screens hundreds of millions of transaction and customer records per day, and annual error rates are a tiny fraction of 1%," said Jennifer Zuccarelli, a spokeswoman for the bank.

"We are pleased to have resolved these matters and to move forward with enhancements to our [foreign assets] compliance programme."

JP Morgan reported net profits of $5.4bn for the three months to 30 June, up from $4.8bn a year earlier.

Source: BBC

Senin, 18 Juni 2012

India: RBI issues warning on banking transactions with Iran

Perceiving a threat of money laundering and terror-financing in banking transactions with Iran, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has asked banks and other financial entities to be cautious in their dealings with entities and funds from the Middle East country.

The RBI circular issued to banks and other entities operating payment systems in India contained a global market caution notice issued by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) on Iran.

The FATF is an inter-governmental body responsible for making policies at national and international levels to combat money laundering and terror-financing.

As per the FATF warning, all financial institutions have been advised "to give special attention to business relationships and transactions with Iran, including Iranian companies and financial institutions."

The FATF has also warned against efforts to bypass or evade counter-measures and risk mitigation practices and urged financial institutions to take into account the risk of money laundering and terror-financing when considering requests by Iranian financial institutions to open branches and subsidiaries in their jurisdiction.

A similar circular has been issued by market regulator Sebi to the stock exchanges, with the objective of ensuring that Indian markets are not used by Iran-based firms for money laundering or terror-financing activities.

In turn, the stock exchanges have asked brokers to ensure compliance with the Sebi circular.

India became a member of FATF last year. Following the nation's accession into the global body, it is required to follow the global standards prescribed by the FATF to check money laundering and terror-financing activities.

Paris-based FATF informs the central government of its member countries about all its cautionary notices and policies, which in turn are forwarded to the concerned enforcement and regulatory agencies.

The latest caution notice on Iran was issued by the FATF to the Indian government late last year. The notice was later forwarded to Sebi, based on which the regulator issued a circular to market intermediaries.

Iran has been subjected to various sanctions by the US and some European countries to thwart the flow of funds allegedly used to finance the country's nuclear weapon ambitions and sponsor terror-related activities. There have been demands in the US for all listed companies to mandatorily disclose their links with Iran.

In its latest notice, FATF has named Iran as a 'jurisdiction' for which the countries need to apply counter- measures to protect the international financial system from substantial money laundering and terror financing risks.

FATF said it will consider asking its members to strengthen counter-measures in February, 2011, if Iran fails to take any concrete steps in this regard.

Sabtu, 16 Juni 2012

US diplomats to hold talks in Seoul on Iran sanctions


A delegation of senior U.S. diplomats is scheduled to arrive in Seoul on Monday for consultations on anti-Iran sanctions expected to focus on how much Korea should cut its crude oil imports from the Middle Eastern nation.

The three-day visit by the U.S. delegation, led by Robert Einhorn, the State Department's special adviser for nonproliferation and arms control, comes amid mounting global tensions over Iran's nuclear ambitions. 

Late last month, U.S. President Barack Obama signed into law a bill that imposes tough sanctions against financial institutions dealing with the central bank of Iran accused of seeking a nuclear weapons program.

The new U.S. sanctions, however, have placed South Korea in a difficult position, as Seoul imports some 10 percent of its crude oil needs from Tehran. 

Einhorn, who last visited South Korea early last month, will be accompanied by Daniel Glaser, the U.S. Treasury's deputy assistant secretary for terrorist financing and financial crimes, Seoul's foreign ministry said. 

South Korean officials said that Seoul has not yet made a decision on how much to cut its crude oil imports from Iran. 

In a statement, the foreign ministry said South Korea will "actively request that the U.S. help minimize potential adverse effects that the new U.S. sanctions could exert on South Korean companies in the course of their implementation." 

During his visit to Seoul last month, Einhorn denied that he specifically asked Korea to stop purchases of crude oil from Iran, but said the U.S. would welcome such a decision by Seoul.

Iranian crude oil accounted for 8.3 percent of total imports by South Korea in 2010, but the ratio rose to 9.6 percent in the first 11 months of last year. 

Currently, Korea is dealing with Iran's central bank to make payments for its crude oil imports. 

In an apparent move to minimize fallout from the U.S. sanctions against Iran, Korean Prime Minister Kim Hwang-sik is currently on a tour of two Middle East nations, Oman and the United Arab Emirates. (Yonhap)

Kamis, 14 Juni 2012

U.S. Rules Bar Banks That Violate Iran Sanctions

The Treasury Department released new regulations on Friday that could bar foreign banks or companies from accessing the financial system in the United States if they did business with entities or people subject to United Nations and United States sanctions.

The regulations, which grew out of legislation Congress passed in June, effectively bar foreign banks from doing business in dollars if they engage in transactions with anyone suspected of involvement in Iran’s nuclear or missile programs. The entities include Iran’s Revolutionary Guards.

The regulations were released just months after the passage of new sanctions on Iran by the United Nations Security Council and the European Union. The European Union sanctions include additional measures aimed at Iranian banks and insurance companies and the Iranian transport sector. Administration officials have said they believe that the sanctions have already started to have an effect.

The Treasury regulations prohibit or impose strict conditions on the use of American bank accounts by any institution that engages in activities associated with Iran’s nuclear and missile programs.

Those activities include aiding the Iranian government’s efforts to obtain weapons of mass destruction or to support terrorism, aiding the activities of people already subject to United Nations sanctions and providing any financial assistance to Iran’s Revolutionary Guards or their affiliates. A final provision is aimed at banks or companies that engage in money laundering or assist any Iranian financial institution — including the Central Bank of Iran — in the activities cited.

Earlier sanctions focused on some of those activities, but violators were subject mostly to fines. The threat of being cut off from the United States economy adds a significant dimension, said Stuart A. Levey, the under secretary of the Treasury for terrorism and financial intelligence, in a briefing for reporters on the regulations.

Mr. Levey planned to leave Friday on a trip to the United Arab Emirates, Lebanon and other Middle Eastern countries to explain the regulations to officials of government and financial institutions.

“It would not be in our interest to act without warning,” he said. “We’re more interested in changing behavior than in ‘getting’ somebody.”

by: By ROBERT F. WORTH
Source: The NY Times

Senin, 11 Juni 2012

Why the Iran Sanctions Matter

It's easy to criticize the U.N. Security Council's new resolution targeting Iran. But it might prove a surprisingly effective tool in tightening the noose on the regime in Tehran.

Wednesday's U.N. Security Council resolution sanctioning Iran marks a critical turning point in the U.S.-led efforts to target Iran's illicit activities. The resolution focuses on Iran's nuclear-weapons and ballistic-missile programs; the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), which is responsible for these programs as well as the regime's support for terrorism; and the Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines (IRISL), which has been directly involved in proliferation shipments. The sanctions included in this resolution are, as U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Susan Rice put it, "as tough as they are smart and precise." If anything, this new resolution is both too precise and purposefully vague. And therein lies its strength.

The list of 40 entities and one individual listed in the resolution's three annexes is extremely targeted. Employing such "smart sanctions" -- pinpointing the specific entities and persons involved in Iran's illicit conduct and holding them accountable while shielding the general Iranian public from old-fashioned, shotgun, regime-wide sanctions -- has been very effective. This tactic denies Iran's revolutionary regime the chance to deflect blame for the country's economic woes, while disrupting its ability to finance and transport material necessary for its nuclear-weapons and ballistic-missile programs. But the number of entities excluded from the resolution is even more telling than the list of those that made the final cut. Most entities designated this week, for example, had already been designated by the U.S. Treasury Department and/or the European Union. They have therefore already been subject to most of the impacts a U.N. resolution would hope to achieve, such as economic isolation by major financial institutions.

Consider Iran's shipping line, IRISL. The U.S. government first designated IRISL in September 2008 for facilitating the transport of cargo for U.N.-designated proliferators and falsifying documents and using deceptive schemes to shroud its involvement in illicit commerce. And, as the State Department noted at the time of the designation, IRISL had already been "called out by the U.N. Security Council as a company that has engaged in proliferation shipments."

But following up on U.S. and EU designations of entities like IRISL or the IRGC-controlled Khatam al-Anbiya construction company (also called Ghorb) by designating them at the United Nations as well is vitally important to the global sanctions regime. With critical countries such as China, Malaysia, Singapore, and others willing to do only the minimum to comply with Security Council resolutions, getting critical entities like IRISL and IRGC companies designated at the U.N. means wider implementation of sanctions.

Unfortunately, multilateral action is not only difficult to achieve, but can often lead to lowest-common-denominator decision-making. So while international consensus was being built for robust action at the U.N., Britain, the European Union, the United States, and others wisely pursued both unilateral and bilateral financial measures focused on IRISL, IRGC-affiliated entities, and other individuals and institutions facilitating Iran's illicit conduct. With the increased militarization of the Iranian regime and the blatant abuses of the IRGC-affiliated Basij militia, targeting entities affiliated with the Revolutionary Guard unilaterally while international consensus was being built to do so at the U.N. level was an effective strategy. That does mean, however, that this week's list of sanctioned entities is more of a reinforcement of prior actions than completely new ones.

And that's OK. Because though the lists of sanctioned entities are very precise, U.S. and other negotiators made sure that general "hooks" upon which additional actions could be "hung" were peppered throughout the body of the resolution. These will provide the United States and other states and multilateral bodies with the international imprimatur for further action. Put another way, the new resolution is most important not for the specific entities listed in its annexes, but for providing a foundation upon which further efforts to disrupt Iran's illicit activities can be built.

Note, for example, the multiple times the resolution "calls upon all States" to do things above and beyond checking the list of specifically sanctioned entities and persons, such as the call to "exercise vigilance" over transactions involving the IRGC that could contribute to "proliferation-sensitive nuclear activities or the development of nuclear weapon delivery systems." In plain English, this language effectively empowers states and other international bodies to take still more stringent action against the IRGC.

Broadening its sanctions against Iran's shipping company, the resolution "calls upon all States" to inspect "all cargo to and from Iran, in their territory, including seaports and airports, if the State concerned has information that provides reasonable grounds to believe the cargo contains items the supply, sale, transfer, or export of which is prohibited" by this or prior Security Council resolutions. The contrast between the specificity of the list of sanctioned entities and the fairly low standard of "reasonable grounds to believe" is a telling example of purposeful vagueness that could prove powerful in the hands of states inclined to get tough on Tehran.

Similarly, the resolution "requests" that all member states report to the U.N. "any information available" on "transfers or activity by Iran Air's cargo division or vessels owned or operated by [IRISL] to other companies" that might be related to sanctions evasion. The resolution "calls upon" states to "take appropriate measures" -- which, again, by virtue of being appropriately vague is appropriately empowering -- both to prohibit Iranian banks from opening branches, subsidiaries, representative offices, joint ventures, or correspondent relationships with banks in their jurisdiction and to prohibit financial institutions in their territories or under their jurisdiction from opening offices or accounts in Iran.

Indeed, the resolution specifically "welcom[es]" the guidance issued by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) -- the multilateral technocratic body that sets international standards to combat money laundering and terrorism finance -- to assist states in implementing their financial obligations under two previous resolutions, 1737 (2006) and 1803 (2008). In particular, it highlights the FATF's warning to "exercise vigilance over transactions involving Iranian banks, including the Central Bank of Iran, so as to prevent such transactions contributing to proliferation-sensitive nuclear activities, or to the development of nuclear weapon delivery systems." So though the Central Bank of Iran is not specifically sanctioned, it is, broadly speaking, open game.

In February, the FATF named Iran to its new blacklist, recognizing that in support of its weapons programs, its crackdown on democracy, and its terrorist proxies, Tehran has continued to engage in deceptive financial conduct aimed at raising, moving, hiding, and accessing funds internationally. In line with the G-20's call to protect the international financial system from abuse, the blacklist identified countries with deficient "anti-money laundering and combating the financing of terrorism" (AML/CFT) measures. Iran received special designation on the blacklist; it was the only country whose illicit financial conduct merited a call for international countermeasures.

Contrary to conventional wisdom, Iran is highly sensitive to such actions. After one of the FATF's warnings, for example, Iran sent a delegation to lobby the agency despite not being a member. The FATF, however, dismissed Iran's claims that legislative changes had fixed its financial shortcomings, calling the new measures "skimpy" and noting their "big deficiencies." Indeed, the FATF blacklisted Iran even as it recognized the regime's "recent steps" to engage with the agency. The message seemed to be that the FATF would not mistake public engagement for substantive progress. Similarly, though Iran requested technical help from the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime to set up a computer-based training center for its nascent financial intelligence unit, the FATF still highlighted the regime's "failure to meaningfully address the ongoing and substantial deficiencies" in its AML/CFT efforts.

The result is a sharp increase in the cost of doing business for the Iranian regime. European multinational companies are terminating business relationships with Iran, following the lead of major international banks in tightening the noose on Iran's financial system. Chinese and Malaysian companies may lap up available contracts, but many key technologies Iran needs for its oil and gas industries and for its nuclear and missile programs are only available in the West.

And now, for a change, existing sanctions might finally be seriously enforced. Just as important as the specific list of sanctioned entities and the broad invitations to take further action against Iran is the resolution's creation of a monitoring committee, including a panel of experts, to better enforce existing sanctions. Indeed, expert panels proved effective in strengthening sanctions on Sudan and Ethiopia. The "naming and shaming" power of the panel's findings could further influence firms and individuals considering whether to run the risk of doing business with Iran. Furthermore, an expert panel could also help the Sanctions Committee and U.N. member states by recommending ways to make the sanctions more effective. Such a monitoring committee would be particularly effective if it included among its experts individuals knowledgeable about export control and dual-use goods.

But implementation and follow-up is everything in the sanctions business. For the new resolution to make a difference, three things must happen.

First, states like Britain and the United States, regional bodies like the EU, and multilateral bodies like the FATF and G-20 must all act on the resolution's various "calls" to expand the resolution beyond the list of specifically sanctioned entities.

Secondly, the monitoring committee must demand substantive reports from member states upon which it can submit public reports with substantive recommendations for enhancing enforcement of existing sanctions.

Finally, unless the report finds that Iran has become fully compliant with its obligations, the Security Council must quickly follow up on the report with another round of sanctions. The resolution requests that the director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency submit a report to the Security Council within 90 days on whether Iran has established "full and sustained suspension" of its illicit nuclear activities. If the international community does not respond in a timely fashion, the entire premise of targeted and graduated sanctions -- the credibility of which are premised on consequences for ongoing illicit conduct -- will be irreparably damaged. One reason Iran has not been deterred by the sanctions put in place to date is that the deadlines of prior resolutions came and went with no timely follow-up. This delay undermined the whole sanctions enterprise, leaving Iran with the general sense it could survive sanctions, get by, and outlast the resolve of the international community. June 9's resolution offers an opportunity to reverse that trend and re-empower sanctions as an effective tool of foreign policy, one that doesn't require the use of force.

On their own, these sanctions will not solve the crisis over Iran's nuclear program. But wisely implemented and enforced, they could prove critical in preventing Iran from getting the bomb. And that's a very good thing.

The New UN Sanctions Resolution Against Iran

The UN Security Council approved a resolution on June 9th imposing a fourth round of sanctions on Iran in response to its continued nuclear enrichment program in violation of prior Security Council resolutions. The vote was 12 in favor, 2 against (Brazil and Turkey) and 1 abstention (Lebanon).

The new resolution imposes new financial restrictions on Iran, expands an existing arms embargo, and authorizes greater stop and search of Iranian cargo ships. Targeted sanctions on specific individuals and entities were expanded. The resolution also includes measures directed against Iran’s Revolutionary Guard.

While the United States, Great Britain and France were its strongest sponsors, China and Russia also expressed their verbal support along with their votes, although the Russian ambassador added a major caveat in his response to a reporter’s question about Russia’s prospective sale of a sophisticated anti-aircraft system to Iran.

Lebanon’s decision to abstain was a pleasant surprise, considering the influence of Iran-backed Hezbollah in the Lebanese government. However, Brazil and Turkey as expected opposed the new resolution on the grounds that it could undermine the proposed nuclear fuel swap agreed by the two countries with Iran last month. They seemed to forget that the European Union has been trying to negotiate with Iran since 2005 and the Obama administration waited 18 months while trying to engage Iran before seeking passage of this resolution. Only when new sanctions became a real possibility did Iran come around to the fuel swap concept that it had first agreed upon and then promptly reneged on last fall.

Rice’s Positive Spin
U.S. Ambassador Susan Rice told reporters after the vote that the “resolution is strong, it’s tough and it’s comprehensive. And it is something that Iran fought very hard to prevent passage today. The effort, the time, the money, and the poise that they employed, to try to prevent this resolution’s passage only underscores their understanding, that this is a major blow.”

Despite the ineffectiveness of the three prior resolutions, Ambassador Rice expressed confidence that the cumulative effect on Iran of all the resolutions is “harmful and hurtful.”

Iran’s Rebuke
Iran remains unbowed. Its representative told the Security Council after the vote that it had no intention of changing its present course. He accused the United States and Great Britain in particular of continuing a long pattern of interference in Iran’s affairs and displaying a double standard vis a vis Israel. Ambassador Rice told reporters that these comments were “reprehensible, offensive, and inaccurate.”

Stronger Resolution on Paper
On paper at least, the new resolution does appear to represent a significant move forward from the prior three. More specifically, the resolution prohibits Iran from investing in sensitive nuclear activities abroad, like uranium enrichment and reprocessing activities, as well as activities involving ballistic missiles capable of delivering nuclear weapons. The ban also applies to investment in uranium mining.

States are prohibited from selling or in any way transferring to Iran various categories of heavy weapons (battle tanks, armored combat vehicles, large caliber artillery systems, combat aircraft, attack helicopters, warships, and certain missiles or missile systems). States are similarly prohibited from providing technical or financial assistance for such systems, or spare parts.

The resolution also sets up a new cargo inspection framework. States are expected to inspect any vessel on their territory suspected of carrying prohibited cargo, including banned conventional arms or sensitive nuclear or missile items. States are also expected to cooperate in such inspections on the high seas.

States are called upon to prevent any financial service and freeze any asset that could contribute to Iran’s proliferation.

Resolution targets the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps
Most significantly, the resolution targets the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) for its role in proliferation and requires states to mandate that businesses exercise vigilance over all transactions involving the IRGC. Fifteen IRGC-related companies linked to proliferation will have their assets frozen. The IRGC is the major power center in Iran’s economic and military spheres as well as one of the government’s primary instruments for suppressing political dissent. Impairing the IRGC’s freedom of operations will be a significant accomplishment, if successful.

The Proof Will be in Enforcement
UN Security Council sanctions resolutions against Iraq, North Korea and Iran have had a bad track record in actual practice. The resolutions have been easy for the sanctioned countries to evade, through the use of multiple front entities, money laundering and trading partners unwilling to give up short term advantage for longer term peace and security.

Also, enforcement of the cargo inspection at sea will be a challenge if Iran, as expected, refuses to cooperate. When the French UN ambassador, for example, was asked what measures France would be willing to take in such a scenario, he refused to answer what he called a “hypothetical question.”

Most ominously, the Russian UN ambassador told reporters that Russia did not consider the sale of its sophisticated S-300 anti-aircraft system to Iran to be within the resolution’s scope. The S-300 missile defense system would no doubt be used by Iran to shield its nuclear sites against a potential air strike, should military force become necessary to stop Iran from producing nuclear bombs. The Russian ambassador is technically correct because the resolution’s ban on the transfer to Iran of certain missile systems is written in such a way that it creates a big loophole for Russia to walk through in delivering to Iran its ground-to-air missiles, including its S-300 anti-aircraft missiles and anti-missile interceptors.

The Obama administration will spin the latest sanctions resolution against Iran as a major diplomatic triumph and a significant obstacle in the way of Iran’s progress towards achieving a nuclear arms capability. I hope they are right. However, until the S-300 loophole is closed; until the U.S. and its allies figure out a way to effectively stop evasions of the sanctions; and until enough countries show that they are willing to enforce the cargo inspections, the Obama administration might want to wait before it celebrates.

Jumat, 08 Juni 2012

Brennan: Al-Qaeda Affiliates Turning To Crime For Funding

U.S. President Barack Obama's chief counterterrorism adviser says that with Al-Qaeda's core under financial strain, its affiliates are increasingly turning to crime to fund their operations. 

Deputy National Security Adviser John Brennan made the remarks in Washington at a Treasury Department symposium titled "Ten Years Later: Progress and Challenges in Combating the Financing of Terrorism Since 9/11."

"Reacting to Al-Qaeda's core financial difficulties, its affiliates in East Africa and on the Arabian Peninsula have come to rely less on support from the Al-Qaeda network as they plan and mount terrorist attacks," Brennan said. 

"While the Al-Qaeda core continues to provide strategic guidance, some affiliates now instead have turned to crime to generate funding -- particularly kidnapping for ransom, control of territory, extortion, and at times, drug trafficking." 

Brennan said that the trend is due to pressure exerted on the terror network by sanctions and other measures that have cut off Al-Qaeda from its financiers or disrupted the funneling of money within the organization. 

He also said the Arabian Peninsula "remains the most important source of financial support for Al-Qaeda and its affiliates and adherents worldwide," but praised Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates for making progress. 

Brennan also singled out Iran for its support of Hamas and Hizballah. 

Source: RFERL

Senin, 04 Juni 2012

Iranian to be sentenced in arms smuggling case

An Iranian man who secretly pleaded guilty to plotting to ship sensitive U.S. military technology to Iran will be sentenced this month, federal authorities said Wednesday as they also revealed that the suspect told an undercover investigator Iran's leaders believe war is coming.

Amir Hossein Ardebili faces up to 140 years in prison after pleading guilty to charges that include conspiracy, money laundering, smuggling and arms export control violations. His case was the latest example of what U.S. officials have described as an intense effort by Iran to evade export controls and acquire critical military technology amid a long-running standoff with the West over its nuclear program.

John Morton, assistant secretary for Immigration and Customs Enforcement, noted just last week an alleged Belgian arms dealer pleaded guilty in federal court in Alabama to charges of conspiring to export fighter jet engines and parts to Iran.

"There is no question that there is an orchestrated effort by the government of Iran to acquire weapons in violation of our laws," he said.

"Unfortunately, there's a whole network of these guys out there, ... and not just on behalf of Iran," Morton added.

Prosecutors said the guilty plea and other details have been kept secret until now because of an ongoing investigation.

Ardebili's defense attorney, Edmund Lyons, did not immediately return a telephone message Wednesday.
Ardebili gave a stark explanation for why he was trying to buy so many different weapons parts, including technology that would help protect Iran from missile attacks.

"By his own admission, Ardebili was assisting Iran in preparing for war with the United States," prosecutor David Hall wrote in a sentencing memorandum.

Court papers also said during a 2007 meeting with an undercover agent, Ardebili said he wanted so much material so "the government (of Iran) could defend ... Because they think the war is coming."

Last month, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad hinted of link between the Ardebili case and that of three young Americans seized by Iran after they crossed the border from northern Iraq. The U.S. and their families said the three are innocent hikers who strayed into Iran accidentally, but Iran has accused them of espionage and could put them on trial.

At a Nov. 9 news conference, Ahmadinejad said Iran's judiciary would deal with the American hikers — then noted that Iran accuses the United States of holding several of its citizens.

According to court papers, Ardebili worked as a procurement agent for the Iranian government and acquired thousands of components, including military aircraft parts, night vision devices, communications equipment and Kevlar. Federal authorities targeted him in 2004 after he contacted an undercover storefront set up in Philadelphia to investigate illegal arms trafficking.

Weiss said that in working with undercover agents, Ardebili's primary interest was in obtaining electrical components with military applications.

Authorities said Ardebili had made wire transfers to bank accounts in Delaware and Massachusetts as part of an effort to illegally acquire the technology.

Ardebili also tried to obtain replacement computer systems to update Iran's fleet of aging F-4 fighter aircraft, authorities said.

After years of telephone and e-mail communications with the undercover agents, Ardebili finally agreed to meet with them in the Caucasus nation of Georgia, where he was arrested in October 2007 and his laptop computer was seized.

"There are a number of transactions that are disclosed on the defendant's laptop," Weiss said.
Sentencing is scheduled for Dec. 14.

Source: AP

Jumat, 01 Juni 2012

'Iran removed from money-washing list'

Iran has been removed from the list of countries involved in money laundering as the result of measures taken by Tehran against suspicious financial transactions, says an Iranian official.

Abdolmahdi Arjmandnejad, the general manager of anti-money laundering division of the Central Bank of Iran (CBI), said that the CBI is also studying three new anti-money laundering measures and that the banking system will be informed about it after the final ratification of the regulations, Mehr news agency reported.

The new instructions include supervision of foreign costumers of financial institutions, surveillance of foreign political persons receiving banking services and the implementation of anti-money laundering laws by money exchanges.

Referring to the recent meeting of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund in Washington, he said, “The explaining of measures taken by Iran against money laundering led to the removal of Iran's name from the list of countries involved in money laundering operations.”

In 2009, CBI enforced the Anti-Money Laundering Law to curb suspicious financial transactions in the country.

Money laundering, a key operation of the underground economy, is the practice of disguising illegally obtained funds so that they seem legal.

Moreover, in a major step towards countering money-laundering, the Islamic Republic has teamed up with the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) to set up a financial intelligence unit to analyze suspicious financial transactions with a view to curbing such crime.

The unit, established in 2010, is collaborating with the Judiciary in investigating suspicious transactions and prosecuting offenders.

Source: Press TV

Rabu, 30 Mei 2012

U.S. terror report cites Venezuela, Iran

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Venezuela's associations with terror states, Iran's meddling in Iraq and the resurgence of al Qaeda in Afghanistan top the concerns in a new State Department report on terrorism threats in countries around the world.

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez is not cooperating with U.S. anti-terror efforts and has "deepened Venezuelan relationships with state sponsors of terrorism Iran and Cuba," the annual report says.

The report notes Chavez's "ideological sympathy" for the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia and the Colombian-based National Liberation Army, which "regularly crossed into Venezuelan territory to rest and regroup."

While the report says it "remained unclear to what extent the Venezuelan government provided support to Colombian terrorist organizations," it notes that Venezuelan weapons stocks have turned up in the hands of Colombian terrorist organizations.

It also notes that Iran and Venezuela began weekly flights between their capitals and the passengers were not subject to proper checks. Among the passengers was a suspect in the plot to bomb New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport.

"Venezuelan citizenship, identity, and travel documents remained easy to obtain, making Venezuela a potentially attractive way station for terrorists," the report says.

Once again, the report says, Iran "remained the most active state sponsor of terrorism."

"Elements of its Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps were directly involved in the planning and support of terrorist acts throughout the region and continued to support a variety of groups in their use of terrorism to advance their common regional goals," it says, citing the group's support for Hezbollah, Hamas, Iraq-based militants, and Taliban fighters in Afghanistan.

The report says that despite promises to stabilize Iraq, Iran "continued to provide lethal support, including weapons, training, funding, and guidance, to some Iraqi militant groups that target coalition and Iraqi security forces and Iraqi civilians."

"In this way, Iranian government forces have been responsible for attacks on coalition forces. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps-Quds Force continued to provide Iraqi militants with Iranian-produced advanced rockets, sniper rifles, automatic weapons (and) mortars that have killed thousands of coalition and Iraqi Forces," it says.

The report says that Iraq "remained at the center of the war on terror," with al Qaeda in Iraq and other insurgent groups battling coalition and Iraqi forces.

It also criticizes Syria, another U.S.-designated state sponsor of terrorism, for allowing foreign fighters into Iraq, citing U.S. government reports that found "nearly 90 percent of all foreign terrorists known to be in Iraq had used Syria as an entry point."

"The Syrian government could do more to stop known terror networks and foreign fighter facilitators from operating within its border," it adds.

Although it notes that no Syrian official has been implicated in bombing attacks in Lebanon, the report says that Damascus "continued to undermine Lebanon's sovereignty and security through its proxies," including Hezbollah.

Syria is also criticized for its weak treatment of terrorist financing and its continued support of Palestinian terror groups such as Hamas, including providing safe haven to its leader, Khalid Mishal. It notes that "Palestinian groups with leaders in Syria have claimed responsibility for anti-Israeli terrorist attacks."

The report notes that the Sudan, North Korea and Cuba, all designated as state sponsors of terror, had not actively supported terrorist groups inside their countries over the past year.

The report once again found al Qaeda and its affiliated networks "remained the greatest terrorist threat to the United States and its partners" last year, reconstituting some of its pre-9/11 operational capabilities in Pakistan's tribal areas. It also found a resurgence of the Taliban in Afghanistan and voiced concern about a rash of bombings by militants, including the one that killed former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto last year.

"Despite the efforts of both Afghan and Pakistani security forces, instability, coupled with the Islamabad brokered cease-fire agreement in effect for the first half of 2007 along the Pakistan-Afghanistan frontier, appeared to have provided AQ leadership greater mobility and ability to conduct training and operational planning, particularly that targeting Western Europe and the United States," the report says.

The report again notes that al Qaeda continued to exploit local grievances for larger terrorist purposes and "seeks weapons of mass destruction in order to inflict the maximum possible damage on anyone who stands in its way, including other Muslims and/or elders, women, and children."

Al Qaeda operatives in East Africa and al-Shabaab militants in Somalia once again posed "the most serious threat to American and allied interests in the region," the report says.

Somalia's weak central government and the lack of rule of law "make Somalia a permissive operating environment and a potential safe haven for both Somali and foreign terrorists already in the region," it found.

"Somalia remains a concern, as its unsecured borders and continued political instability provide opportunities for terrorist transit and/or organization. AQ is likely to keep making common cause with cells of Somali extremists in an attempt to disrupt international peacemaking efforts in Somalia," it adds.

The report also voices concern about insurgent terror tactics in Algeria over the last year and calls Yemen's counterterrorism efforts last year "mixed" with "significant setbacks," including releasing all returned Guantanamo detainees and instituting a surrender program for terrorists with "lenient requirements." It also criticizes Yemen's weak counterterrorism laws and an "ineffective" justice system.

The report notes that human rights organizations have accused China of using counterterrorism in the run-up to the Olympics as a pretext to suppress ethnic Uighurs in the Xinjiang Autonomous Region. Although the Chinese have claimed they are terrorists, the report found no concrete evidence of that.

It also notes a spread of radical Islam in Europe, where several "significant terrorist plots" were foiled.

Senin, 28 Mei 2012

British companies warned over money laundering threat from Iran, Pakistan

Britain's Treasury is warning businesses in the country that trading with companies in Iran or Pakistan threatens to assist money laundering or terrorist financing.

Treasury minister Kitty Ussher said Friday that British companies have been warned over the risks of business dealings with a host of countries.

She said businesses have been told to use extra scrutiny and due diligence, particularly in transactions with Iran.

Source: The Jerusalem Post

'Israel allows vast sums to reach Hamas'

The government has admitted that it is allowing hundreds of millions of dollars to be transferred to Hamas in Gaza, the watchdog organization Shurat Hadin charged on Thursday.

Organization head Nitzana Darshan-Leitner quoted from a letter she received from the legal adviser of the Prime Minister's Office that said, "The transfer of funds to the Palestinian Authority in the Gaza Strip takes place with the knowledge of the government of Israel for diplomatic reasons."

However, Mark Regev, a spokesman for the Prime Minister's Office, told The Jerusalem Post that the funds mentioned in the legal adviser's letter referred to the money from customs taxes belonging to the PA in accordance with the Paris Agreement of 1994.

According to the agreement, the customs tax for goods imported to the West Bank is collected by Israel at the ports and then delivered to the PA in Ramallah.

"Not a single penny of this money goes to the Hamas," said Regev. The money is used to pay PA employees working in the Gaza Strip, he added.

However, Shurat Hadin attorney Ro'i Kochavi said that his organization's allegations were not related to these funds but to other transfers by the Bank of Israel and the Postal Authority.

"The transfer of hundreds of millions [dollars' worth] of shekels in cash (bills and coins) to the Gaza Strip has continued since the Hamas takeover of Gaza last year," wrote Shurat Hadin. "The money is transferred in armored cars from banks in Judea and Samaria by the Postal Authority and others. Some of the money is used to replace bills that deteriorated [and could not be used] and some to launder money that the Hamas smuggles into the Gaza Strip from Iran via Egypt."

Kochavi told the Post that the Iranian money was delivered in large bills. The armored cars sent by banks with branches in Ramallah and Gaza bring Israeli shekels to the Gaza-Israel border, where they switch loads with armored cars from Gaza carrying the Iranian money, he said.

Kochavi charged that Hamas was using the shekels to pay their armed forces.

Meanwhile, the Iranian money is brought to the banks in the West Bank, where it is sold to the Bank of Israel in return for shekels, he said. The cycle then repeats itself.

In a letter to Kochavi, Merav Batzri, assistant to the legal adviser of the Bank of Israel, wrote that the bank did not know anything about the facts presented in Shurat Hadin's letter. However, it added that "the Bank of Israel also serves as a professional economic adviser to the government of Israel. In this context, it is involved with the relations between banks in Israel and those operating in the areas of the Palestinian Authority. Furthermore, the decision to transfer funds to the Gaza Strip is based on a wide basket of considerations aside from economic considerations, including political, security and others. These are the responsibility of the government rather than the bank."

Attorney Ronen Baharav wrote that "the Postal Bank Company, which provides services to the Postal Authority, is required from time to time to transfer money or cash checks on behalf of recipients living in the Gaza Strip. The bank's activities are carried out with the knowledge of the relevant authorities."

Darshan-Leitner wrote that she was considering petitioning the High Court of Justice, charging that the government was violating the Prohibition of Terrorist Funding Law and the Prohibition against Money Laundering Law.

Source: JPost

FATF raises Iran risks

FATF, an international anti-money laundering body will alert members on Thursday to deficiences in Iran's system of combating money laundering and terrorism financing, a U.S. Treasury official said.

"FATF confirms its call to all its members and urges all jurisdictions to advise their financial institutions to take the risk arising from deficencies in Iran's anti-money laundering and counter-financing of terrorism regimes into account for enhanced due diligence," said Stuart Levey, undersecretary for terrorism and financial intelligence, reading from a statement.

http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L28173702.htm

Sabtu, 26 Mei 2012

Dubai reacts to US pressure on Iran

updated 11:13 p.m. ET Dec. 20, 2007
Mention sanctions to Iranians and their answer is, often, Dubai. As the US has tightened the squeeze on financial dealings with Tehran and other countries have slowly followed, Iranians have sought to do business through neighbouring Dubai, an open, free-wheeling emirate and transhipment hub that has long welcomed them.

But even Dubai, and the federal government in the United Arab Emirates, is now showing signs of unease as US pressure on banks to stop lending to Iran mounts and security concerns over the presence of a large Iranian community intensify.

Following the introduction of new export control laws, the UAE has stepped up the inspection of cargoes heading for Iran, confiscating last month a shipment that contravened United Nations sanctions aiming to hem in Iran's nuclear and missile programmes.

Some of the 350,000 Iranians in Dubai are also starting to face restrictions. Anecdotal reports suggest some have been unable to renew residence visas. Nasser Hashempour, vice-president of the Iranian Business Council of Dubai, says it is becoming almost impossible for new Iranian businesses to secure permits.

Such is the emerging nervousness about doing business with Iran that Dubai-based and UAE-majority owned firms underwriting Iranian merchants' transactions are finding that international banks are "more cautious" about extending credit, says Mr Hashempour.

UAE banks, meanwhile, have stopped issuing lines of credit to Iranian banks, making it difficult for Iranian front companies to circumvent sanctions.

The restrictions suggest that politics is finally intruding on business in the emirate, despite long-standing UAE government attempts to keep the two apart.

Alarmed by Iran's nuclear programme and upset by a territorial dispute over three islands in the Gulf, the government has long shared Washington's concerns about Tehran. The UAE is a key US ally in the region, the largest Gulf importer of US goods and a party to the multi-billion dollar arms deals announced in July designed in part to combat the perceived Iranian threat.

Despite grumbles among Washington politicians that the UAE has not done enough to curb the financing of terrorism, US officials say co-operation over Iran has been deepening.

Since 2002 the US has built up the intelligence capacity of a "listening post" at its Dubai consulate, where a team of about five Iran specialists monitor events in the Islamic republic, while also making contacts with Iranian expatriates, many of whom hold the current regime in low regard.

However, with the large Iranian community promoting trade flows that make Iran the emirate's single largest trading partner, the UAE has been keen to also promote business with Iran.

The UAE government dismisses suggestions that the welcome to Iranians has cooled.

Instead, officials cite a combination of factors that could affect the business relationship.

First, the government's attitude is that it will not follow the US in adopting unilateral sanctions against Iran but will resolutely abide by UN Security Council resolutions, which have targeted three leading Iranian banks and the Quds Force of the Revolutionary Guard.

Second, concern over the UAE's reputation - particularly following the embarrassing discovery that front companies working for the A Q Khan illegal nuclear procurement network were based in the UAE - has led to tighter controls on re­export trade. "Export controls are not designed against Iran but they protect the reputation of this place," says an ­official.

Some 40 companies have been shut down over transhipment offences, a few of them allegedly involved in shadowy Iranian-related business.

"This is related to the tension in the region because security and stability are more important than trade," says Mustafa Alani, analyst at the Dubai-based Gulf Research Centre. "Financial benefit will come second to security."

Despite the easing of the international frenzy over the threat posed by Iran's nuclear activities - following US intelligence findings that Tehran stopped its atomic weapons programme in 2003 - the US will continue to press its allies, including the UAE, for more action.

"We want all countries to do whatever they can to help prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons," says Tom Casey, a State department spokesman. "Beyond compliance with UN Security Council resolutions, each nation will have to decide for itself what other steps it can take."

Copyright The Financial Times Ltd. All rights reserved.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22346350/

Selasa, 22 Mei 2012

UK Treasury backs warning of "serious threats" to international finance

The UK's Treasury has backed warnings from the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) that the international financial system could face "serious threats" from deficiencies in the anti-money laundering (AML) and counter-terrorist financing (CTF) systems of countries including Iran and Pakistan.

Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan were also flagged up by the FATF as countries that face AML and CTF deficiencies, along with the island of Sao Tome off the coast of west Africa and the northern part of Cyprus.

As a result of the warnings, the Treasury has advised all UK businesses covered by the Money Laundering Regulations 2007 to treat transactions from Iran and Uzbekistan as "situations that by their nature can present a higher risk of money laundering or terrorist financing" and therefore require increased scrutiny.

People operating under the authorisation of the Financial Services Authority should also consider the advice when developing their counter-financial crime systems in order to minimise risk, it added.

The FATF is an inter-governmental body that seeks to develop nationally and internationally adopted anti-money laundering and counter-terrorist financing policies.

Source: Bobsguide

Senin, 21 Mei 2012

G7 praises FATF action against Iran

Washington, Oct 20: Group of seven finance leaders have praised the Financial Action Task Force for its role in uncovering alleged money laundering and other illicit finance related to Iran.

"We remain committed to fighting money laundering, terrorist financing and other illicit financing involving similar risks to financial markets, G7 finance ministers and central bankers from the world`s seven richest nations said in a statement after a one-day meeting here.

"We particularly commend FATF for taking steps to protect the international financial system from the various money laundering and terrorist financing risks related to Iran," the joint statement said.

"In the wake of two unanimous UN Security Council resolutions addressing Iran`s nuclear and ballistic missile programmes, and the FATF`s actions identifying the risks of illicit finance associated with Iran, financial institutions are advised to take into account these risks."

The international money laundering watchdog called on Iran a week ago to address to close loopholes in its financial system and take steps to limit terrorist financing.

"FATF calls upon Iran to address on an urgent basis its deficiencies," the group said in a statement from Paris.

Minggu, 20 Mei 2012

US Official Hails UAE Steps to Protect Financial Centre from Iran’s ‘Illicit Transactions’

The UAE has demonstrated “real commitment” to protect its international commercial and financial centre from illicit financial transactions and commerce.

“In the long run, there is a competitive advantage for the centres that are trusted to have clean financial flows,” Stuart Levey, Undersecretary, Terrorism and Financial Intelligence of the US Department of Treasury, told reporters on Wednesday before leaving for London after a two-day visit to the UAE as part of a four-nation tour of Israel, the UAE, the UK and France.

Levey has visited the Gulf countries several times in the past few years as he deals with Iran’s use of international financial system to pursue its nuclear programme.

The main purpose of his tour now was to brief key allies, including the UAE, on some of the actions the US has taken to implement the multilateral obligations under the UN Security Council resolutions.

“There is a challenge in the UAE specially because of deep financial and commercial ties between the UAE and Iran,” he said.

“I had an excellent set of meetings here. There is a very strong alliance on all issues between the US and the UAE and the issue of Iran as well”, he said.

“The UAE in general has built and continue to improve upon an international commercial and financial centre. We shared ideas about how important it is to build that sort of a centre to protect the system from illicit financial transactions and commerce because in the long run there is a competitive advantage for financial centres that take those issues seriously and become known as centres to be trusted to have clean financial flows,” he explained.

He said Iran’s pursuit of a nuclear programme in defiance of the UN Security Council resolutions is viewed as a threat not just to the US but all across the world, including in this region.

“Iran is engaging in deceptive financial conduct to pursue its programme and trying to do so in this region that is viewed as very much a threat to the financial centres they are trying to build here,” he said.

Levey said the UAE took very seriously its obligations under the UN Security Council resolutions. It also took seriously its commitments as a country that had articulated its support for Financial Action Task Force (FATF) principles as well as the future of its financial system and its reputation

He said that continual improvement in controls was the only way to tackle the worldwide problem of money laundering.

He said Iran’s use of relationships in international financial system to move money to pursue its nuclear and missile programme and its support to terrorist groups was a principal threat.

qudoos@khaleejtimes.com

Source: Khaleej Times