Tampilkan postingan dengan label Qatar. Tampilkan semua postingan
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Sabtu, 30 Juni 2012

Qatar Central Bank Strengthening Capacities to Fight Money Laundering

HE Sheikh Fahad bin Faisal al-Thani, Qatar Central Bank (QCB) deputy governor and chairman of the National Anti-Money Laundering and Terrorist Financing Committee on Sunday launched the first permanent program entitled "Strengthening Capacities to Fight Money Laundering and Terrorist Financing ".

The five-day event, which is being held at Qatar Credit Bureau, is organized by Qatar's national committee. In his opening remarks, QCB deputy governor stressed the importance of upgrading the staff involved in combating money laundering and the financing of terrorism in the light of the increased challenges posed by using modern methods knowledge in all the various criminal activities, in order to tackle the menace.

The committee's decision to adopt this program aims to train professionals and public officials to analyze and verify financial documents and understand money laundering and terror finance methodologies to counter the dangers posed by these activities, HE al-Thani said. Sincere determination is a key element to assure the effective implementation of the national programs and the measures taken to date by the Qatari authorities in this respect as well as the enforcement of internationally accepted standards against money laundering and terrorism financing , he added.

Concluding, Sheikh Fahad bin Faisal al-Thani expressed hope that the State of Qatar would have a permanent national program on financial analysis, or investigation in transaction monitoring that could develop a practical guide for the regional issues associated with money laundering and terrorist financing .

For his part the Head of Qatar Financial Information Unit (QFIU), HE Sheikh Ahmed Bin Eid Al Thani said this program is part of the National Anti-Money Laundering and Terrorism Financing Committee's strategy to counter money laundering and terrorism financing.

An important part of the program, which is being launched today, is designed to enhance the training capacities of participants from the financial and non-financial sectors, including the security services and the state law enforcement agencies. Qatar’s national anti-money laundering and combating terrorism financing committee was established in 2002 and is made up of a number of senior officials from the QCB, Ministry of Interior and Ministry of Finance among others.

The Financial Action Task Force (FATF), an inter-governmental body whose purpose is the development and promotion of national and international policies to combat money laundering and terrorist financing, has hailed the remarkable progress made by the State of Qatar to combat money laundering and terrorist financing.

In October 2010, the FATF publicly welcomed the significant progress in improving the AML/ CFT regimes in Qatar and noted that its jurisdictions met their commitments in their action plans regarding the strategic AML/CFT deficiencies that the FATF had identified in February 2010.(QNA)

Senin, 18 Juni 2012

Qatar praised for dirty money curbs

Following an 18-month intensive review of Qatar’s legislative framework on anti-money laundering and combating financing of terrorism, the National Anti Money Laundering (NAMLC) has commended the collective efforts of those involved in developing a regulatory infrastructure in line with the NAMLC’s AML/CFT national vision and strategy and the highest demands of AML/CFT international best practice.

The culmination of this work was the enactment of Qatar’s new Law No. (4) of 2010 on Anti-Money Laundering and Combating the Financing of Terrorism (the Law) which commenced April 30, 2010. However, both in prior to this law and following its enactment, a tripartite committee of financial sector regulatory bodies, formed by the Qatar Central Bank (QCB) and including the Qatar Financial Markets Authority and the Qatar Financial Centre Regulatory Authority were involved in a highly collaborative exercise to coordinate and harmonise their respective AML/CFT rules and regulations.

Each body’s AML/CFT rules and regulations have now been brought into force and have been designed to ensure alignment both with the new law and their compliance with FATF recommendations and standards. NAMLC Chairman, Sheikh Fahad Faisal Al-Thani, said: “Qatar has made giant strides in its ability to continue to successfully fight against financial crime. Such an achievement is a reflection of the ability of our highly professional financial organisations to work together.”

Jumat, 25 Mei 2012

Qatar steps cut ‘dirty money’

QATAR has taken adequate precautions to combat money laundering and terrorism financing, according to Qatar Central Bank Governor HE Sheikh Abdullah bin Saud al-Thani.

Foremost among them was the Law No. 28 of 2002 for Combating Money Laundering which was subsequently amended by the Law No. 21 of 2003.

“These laws provided the legislative structure for all measures and precautions taken in combating money laundering and terrorism financing. These are designed to protect our financial institutions and sectors from the risks posed by money laundering and terrorism financing,” he said in a report published by the National Anti-Money Laundering & Terrorism Financing Committee.

The report was distributed at the QCB conference on ‘Tackling money laundering’ at the
Sheraton yesterday. Pursuant to Article 8 of the above law, the National Committee for Combating Money Laundering and Terrorism Financing was created in November 2002 under the QCB deputy governor.

“This committee has been carrying out its tasks and responsibilities as laid down by the law and made significant achievements in combating money laundering and terrorism financing. Its effort was instrumental in Qatar qualifying to join several international and regional organisations in the field such as the Middle East and North Africa Financial Action Task Force (MENA FATF) and Egmont Group,” Sheikh Abdullah said.

Qatar Central Bank (QCB) has set up the Financial Information Unit (FIU) which is the body presently in charge of supervising the measures taken to combat money laundering and terrorism financing. Since the 90s, QCB has been taking measures to combat these. “To this end, we have issued several instructions to financial institutions in Qatar, laying down all procedures that should be observed as well as guidelines or work manuals that enable institutions to identify criminal acts and tackle them,” the QCB governor said.

Money laundering combating efforts should not be regarded as task for the law enforcement authorities only. They must be treated as issues that threaten the financial stability of the whole economy, Sheikh Abdullah said.

He added the importance of this aspect was felt more strongly during the last few years following the huge increase in money laundering, particularly those through the global financial and banking system.

“During the last few years it has become painfully clear to all countries that the threat of money laundering and terrorism financing is not just limited to the economic system of one particular nation. It has grown to enormous proportions that place the stability of the entire global financial and banking system at greater risks,” Sheikh Abdullah noted.

Similarly, money laundering has “devastating” effect on the macro economy as it weakens the ability of the authorities to implement their policies because of the “low credibility” of the economic data and statistics available in an environment where it is not possible to measure and forecast the size of these activities.

Furthermore, the sharp fluctuation in the movement of funds, deposits and cash flows accompanying money laundering adversely affect the stability of the monetary and foreign exchange markets.

Sheikh Abdullah warned that the failure to observe the international standards set for combating money laundering resulted in huge economic costs and other risks.

http://www.gulf-times.com/site/topics/article.asp?cu_no=2&item_no=209149&version=1&template_id=36&parent_id=16

Jumat, 18 Mei 2012

Is Terrorist Funding Adapting to Post-9/11 Laws?

Terrorist networks are adapting their financing methods to circumvent new anti-terror laws passed after 9/11, say Michael Jacobson and Matthew Levitt of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. Both are also former officials with the Treasury Department's Office of Terrorism and Financial Intelligence. In their report released this month, The Money Trail: Finding, Following, and Freezing Terrorist Finances (CLICK TO DOWNLOAD), the pair argue that terrorist networks like Al Qaeda are increasingly relying on criminal operations, private donations, and informal transfers of cash to avoid the extensive methods of electronic surveillance enacted after 9/11.

The report was discussed in a Sunday RFE/RL interview with Jacobson, who was also a counsel on the 9/11 Commission. (Levitt wrote a concise summary of the report in his Counterterrorism Blog last week.) He warns:

"[I]n that period after 9/11, when there was greater international willingness and cooperation on counterterrorism, a lot of countries took steps to improve their own capabilities. As you've gotten further away from 9/11 – as the threat seems less clear, and along with some specific feelings in foreign governments and in the private sector wondering about the importance of combating terrorist financing – I think you've seen the international effort slipping.

[...]

That's one of the ironies of the success since 9/11. You've seen as the United States and the Europeans and other governments have cracked down on the use of the formal financial system of banks, you've seen a shift away from banks to terrorists using cash, to terrorists using cash couriers, to terrorists using Hawala and other informal financial-transfer mechanisms."

One interesting point raised was the idea that some countries are "passive supporters" of Al Qaeda. Iran, for instance, actively supports Hezbollah and Hamas, but maintains a mistrustful tolerance of Al Qaeda:

"Iran has a very tenuous relationship with Al-Qaeda. It is a balancing act for them. They do not trust each other. They do not really like each other. But I think, at times, enemies of the United States can find things to agree on. And so I think even before 9/11 you've actually seen Iran let Al-Qaeda members go through Iran on the way to Afghanistan and Pakistan and not stamp their passports so they wouldn't have a record of going into Afghanistan and Pakistan."

Additionally, on top of the lucrative opium trade in Afghanistan, terrorists are beginning to use other criminal means to raise money for operations. For example, the cell in Madrid responsible for the 2004 train bombings raised most of their money by selling hashish, while one of the UK cells behind the 7/7 attacks acquired part of their funding by defaulting on a bank loan. Well, what about the efficacy of freezing financial assets?:

"This is one of the misunderstood areas of terrorist financing, where the public and the media tend to view the public designations, the public blacklisting and the freezing as the sum total of what is being done in the terrorist financing area. To use that as the metric, I think, is misleading. It has to be coupled with a really aggressive and effective intelligence – a 'following the money approach.'

One of the difficulties the U.S. has encountered in this area has been in terms of the Gulf countries where they have made a lot of improvements since 9/11 but where a lot of improvements still could be made. There are a few problems in this area. One of them is that a few of the Gulf countries – like the United Arab Emirates and Qatar and Bahrain – are very focused on trying to make themselves international financial centers. Obviously, in that respect, it is very important to draw in capital from around the world and be an attractive place for money to come. But at the same time, you've got to make sure that the money coming in is clean and that you've put adequate controls in place to regulate. So I think that has been a hard balance to strike in the Gulf."

Jacobson also echoed what CIA Director General Michael Hayden stressed last week in a speech at the Atlantic Council: Al Qaeda has constantly been on the run since the Taliban were toppled in Afghanistan and now spends much of its resources strictly on securing the safety of its leadership. As such, "a lot of the cells, for example in the United Kingdom and elsewhere, have been raising the funds themselves at this point. So you really have seen a shift from central control of the funding for terrorist cells and terrorist plots."

In a recent piece for the New Atlanticist, my colleague James Joyner discussed Hayden's remarks on the recurring trend of Al Qaeda establishing a base in a country, being chased out, and reconstituting elsewhere. Under the Taliban's Afghanistan, Al Qaeda's fundraising activities were definitely more centralized than they are now. However, it would be very interesting to look at whether the organization's financing methods in the transitional period between Yemen and Afghanistan mimic its present methods. If parallels do indeed exist, it would seem that this knowledge could be used to improve laws aimed at stopping terror funding.

Jacobson states:

"[T]he reality is that if you don't know what you are looking for – if you don't understand terrorist financing – then you are not going to stop it. One of the things we recommend, now that they have this good rules-based structure in place, is that they have got to shift to more of a risk-based structure. You've got to figure out whether countries are actually stopping it. That would be an important shift."

Knowing what to look for may be half the battle.

Peter Cassata is an assistant editor with the Atlantic Council. Photo credit: Popsci.com.

Source: ACUS

Selasa, 15 Mei 2012

US workshop in Jordan builds support to battle money laundering

The U.S. government organized a workshop in Jordan to teach officials from the Arab countries how to detect and investigate the smuggling of money.

The U.S. has been working with Jordan and other Arab countries to ensure that banking institutions are subject to appropriate oversight and that they have effective programs in place to prevent money-laundering and terrorist financing.

Participants, including representatives from Jordan, Algeria, Egypt, Kuwait, Lebanon, Mauritania, Morocco, Oman, the Palestinian Authority, Qatar, Tunisia and Yemen, examined anti-money laundering standards used by the Financial Action Task Force, a Paris-based inter-government body set up in 1989 by the Group of Eight industrialized nations.

This week, U.S. federal prosecutors said two NY residents were indicted on charges of trying to smuggle $500,000 (euro323,000) from the U.S. to Jordan.

Authorities said a grand jury in Hartford, Connecticut returned an indictment charging 35-year-old Hassan Abuzaitoun and 33-year-old Mohammad Alazzam with conspiracy to commit money laundering and conspiracy to smuggle bulk cash from the United States. Both are naturalized U.S. citizens from Jordan residing in Yonkers, New York.

Jordanian authorities have often asserted that Jordan was free of money laundering because of its strict monetary regulations and practices.

In 2004, three different groups of families of suicide bombing victims in Israel filed suits in a Brooklyn, N.Y. federal court against Jordan's largest financial institution _ Arab Bank _ alleging that it moved donations from Saudi Arabia to militant Palestinian groups, including Hamas and Islamic Jihad.

The bank denied the allegation. It later decided to close down its New York branch saying it was pursuing its strategy to focus on operations in the Arab world and Europe.

http://www.amlosphere.com/america/legislation/us-workshop-in-jordan-builds-support-to-battle-money-laundering.html