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Minggu, 01 Juli 2012

Central Bank in UAE gets 1,000s of SARs

Financial companies reported 55 per cent more suspicious money transfers to the UAE Central Bank last year compared to 2009, the head of the regulator's anti-money laundering unit said today.

The Central Bank received 2,711 tip-offs from insurers, banks, investment companies and other financial services firms last year, said Abdulrahim Mohamed al Awadi, an executive director and the head of the anti-money laundering and suspicious cases unit. That compared to 1,750 reports in 2009.

The rise "shows the effectiveness" of efforts to educate financial firms about their responsibilities to report suspicious financial activity, Mr al Awadi said. It was not clear, however, whether the rise was due to increased vigilance or an upturn in money-laundering activity.

Moves to track and prosecute money laundering propagated globally following the terrorist attacks on the US of September 11, 2001 as nations including the UAE enacted laws and increased monitoring of transactions suspected of financing terrorism. The UAE passed a Federal law in 2002 covering the detection and reporting of suspicious transactions.

"You all have a responsibility in partnership with the regulators in ensuring that the UAE financial system stays clean and protected from being abused by criminals, money launderers and terrorist financiers," he told a seminar for insurers and insurance brokers.

The seminar was the first of a series planned this year for the insurance, banking and investment sectors to update executives on developments in international money-laundering reporting rules. As part of the GCC, the UAE is a member of the FATF, a global body that aims to stamp out terrorist financing and money laundering.

Insurance companies in the UAE have long been identifying and reporting suspicious transactions, Mr al Awadi said, but "they have to understand further what are the obligations required under the best practices worldwide."

Source: The National

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

Dubai regulators to keep tabs on money laundering

Dubai's financial services authority will remain on guard against money laundering because such safeguards are needed to attract foreign capital, its chief executive said on Wednesday, and indicated a merger between the Dubai and Abu Dhabi stock exchanges could be an "important" development in the Middle East financial system.

"We will continue with our anti-money laundering efforts, systems and controls," Paul Koster told Dow Jones Newswires yesterday on the sidelines of a banking conference. "We are serious."

His comments follow May's Dh1.1 million fine which the regulator slapped on the local branch of an online broker for breaching its anti-money laundering systems and controls.

Commenting on the likelihood of a merger between the two stock exchanges, Koster said: "That is a political issue. But I would say consolidation is very important.

Talks of a possible merger have been on for a while as exchange operators globally are seen seeking new synergies and moving toward consolidation.

Earlier this year, Germany's Deutsche Borse AG and NYSE Euronext announced a takeover pact, while London Stock Exchange Group and Toronto's TMX Group said they have reached a deal to merge operations.

Russia's top exchanges, Micex Group and RTS, had announced their plan to merge, and in October last year, Singapore Exchange announced an $8.3 billion (Dh30.48 billion) offer for all the shares of ASX, the operator of the Australian Securities Exchange.

Source: Gulf News

Minggu, 24 Juni 2012

Nasdaq Dubai unveils new listing rules

Nasdaq Dubai sought to boost investor interest and liquidity in its market on Tuesday by obliging future listings to have a broader investor base and lowering the bar on the size of company it will allow to list.

New IPOs will need at least 400 individual or institutional shareholders or reserve at least 10 per cent of the issue for retail investors. There are currently no minimum requirements.

"The majority of companies listed on (UAE) exchanges are private placements, with 10 to 20 shareholders and daily liquidity close to zero. That is not really a market," Nasdaq Dubai chief executive Jeff Singer told reporters in Dubai. "IPOs will need to show there is a retail interest in their offering."

In addition, Nasdaq Dubai-listed companies -- which include one of Dubai's flagship firms, DP World -- will now need to report results on a quarterly basis rather half-yearly.

Singer said these proposals may be amended after a consultation period with market players, but added he expects the new rules to be introduced during the second-quarter.

To IPO on Nasdaq Dubai, firms must list at least 25 per cent of their shares. Companies will now be able to offer up to half their free float as preferential shares.

No IPOs have successfully listed in the UAE for more than two years, and Singer said the above changes would help woo local businesses and other small-to-medium enterprises.

Minimum market cap rules will also be amended to make it easier to list.

"While improvements to the regulatory framework are very welcome, the main obstacle to an improved IPO market is the low valuations in the UAE," said Fahd Iqbal, EFG Hermes strategist. "Equity holders do not seem to be willing to sell to the market at prevailing low multiples."

Nasdaq Dubai is majority-owned by Dubai Financial Market.

Source: Emirates 24

Rabu, 20 Juni 2012

UAE central bank orders freeze of Libyan assets

By EMAN EL-SHENAWI

The Central Bank of the United Arab Emirates has ordered the freeze on assets belonging to 19 Libyan individuals and institutions and expects to prepare a report on the decision within a week, an official said on Monday.

In the latest string of orders against suspicious funds belonging to individuals from ousted Middle East governments, the central bank has now instructed the country’s Gulf banks to “initiate a search” into the funds of unnamed Libyans, according to Reuters.

“We have instructed banks to initiate a search and have requested them to freeze the assets,” Abdulrahim Al Awadi, executive director at the UAE central bank’s anti-money laundering and suspicious cases unit, told reporters on the sidelines of a conference in Abu Dhabi.

“We are expecting within the next week or so to complete the report for submission to the ministry of foreign affairs,” he added.

The UAE has already frozen the assets of the Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi and his close associates. Libya is still facing ongoing civil unrest where rebels are demanding an end to Mr. Qaddafi’s 41-year rule.

On Sunday the central bank revealed that it is to implement stricter money declaration rules in an effort to improve monitoring of suspicious cash flows.

The UAE is considered one of the region’s “safe havens,” particularly during the political unrest that swept countries in the Middle East and North Africa. Analysts said that Dubai attracted heavy investment inflows from the affected countries when the unrest peaked earlier this year.

In March, anti-corruption groups asked UAE authorities to take action over possible transfer of assets by ousted Egyptian and Tunisian rulers and their loyalists,

The UAE central bank earlier this month ordered a freeze on assets belonging to ousted Tunisian president Zine El Abidine Ben Ali whose trial on corruption charges began in Tunis on Monday.

The bank also launched a probe in April into the accounts, investments or deposits belonging to former Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak.

(Eman El-Shenawi, a writer at Al Arabiya English, can be reached at: eman.elshenawi@mbc.net.)

Source: Al Arabiya

Selasa, 19 Juni 2012

UAE to toughen up money declaration rules from September

The United Arab Emirates will require those leaving the country to declare large amounts of money from September as part of an effort to improve monitoring of suspicious cash flows, officials said on Sunday.

Dubai, a Gulf trade and finance hub, has been fighting a reputation as a haven for money laundering since the Sept. 11 attacks of 2001 drew attention to the relative ease of moving money through the city.

"The UAE... has put in place a strong legal, regulatory and institutional framework to counter money laundering and combat terrorist financing and thereby protect its institutions from any reputation risk," Central Bank Governor Sultan Nasser al-Suweidi told a conference on the new measure.

The current regulation only applies to arriving passengers.

The central bank said it is also bringing the minimum declaration amount in line with international standards, raising the requirement to declare cash and bearer instruments such as cheques to 100,000 dirhams ($27,230), or the equivalent in foreign currencies, from 40,000 dirhams. ($1=3.673 UAE Dirhams) (Reporting by Martin Dokoupil and Martina Fuchs; Editing by Nick Macfie)

Source: Reuters

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

Rabu, 13 Juni 2012

UAE Central Bank sees rise in suspicious transactions

Financial firms in the United Arab Emirates have reported a 25 percent increase in "suspicious" transactions in the first five months of this year as the Gulf state steps up vigilance aga inst money laundering, a senior central bank official said on Wednesday. 


At least 1221 suspicious transactions were reported as of the end May compared to 978 transactions reported during the same period last year, fi gures provided by the central bank showed. 

In 2011, suspicious transactions reported totaled 2576 compared to 2781 in 2010, t he central bank figures showed. 

"If such transactions have increased, it means that there is more awareness, more understanding and more training and that is the main objective of our anti-money laundering efforts," Abdulrahim Mohamed al Awadi, executive director and head of the anti-money laundering unit told reporters. 

"We have enhanced cooperation with companies and the international community to enable the exchange of information relating to money laundering and terrorist financing," he said after signing a memorandum of understanding with the Financial Intelligence Unit of Madagascar. 

The suspicious transactions are investigated and appropriate action is taken by the authorities, he said, declining to elaborate. 

The UAE, in line with other countries worldwide, stepped up efforts to combat money laundering and "terrorist" financing after the September 11, 2001 attacks in the United States. 

The UAE has signed MoUs with 38 countries to cooperate and share information relating to money laundering and financing of militants. 

Source: Reuters

Sabtu, 09 Juni 2012

India arrests hawala money laundering suspect Naresh Jain

British police suspect Naresh Kumar Jain, also wanted in Dubai, US and Europe, laundered millions for organised crime gangs

A multimillionaire suspected of being one of the world's leading underworld bankers is under arrest in India after a global manhunt involving British police.

The Serious and Organised Crime Agency (Soca) believes that Naresh Kumar Jain is responsible for laundering millions of pounds of profits from organised crime gangs in the UK over several years. His organisation has been under investigation in Britain since 2006, after inquiries into the cash flows of drug gangs and other criminal networks repeatedly identified his alleged network at the end of money transactions.

Jain, 50, was seized in New Delhi on Sunday, a year after he jumped bail on money laundering charges in Dubai, from where he allegedly ran his operations. Soca is now liaising with both Indian and Dubai police.

Labelled a criminal mastermind by alleged victims, Jain is suspected of laundering money for Albanian and Italian heroin dealers, and narcotics cartels in America, the United Arab Emirates, Pakistan and Britain, according to inquiries in Italy and the US. German and US police say Jain's operation has tentacles in all of the major drug and terrorism hotspots across the globe. He was also wanted by police in Spain and the Netherlands.

According to Soca and other international agencies, Jain is suspected of controlling a laundering system capable of moving $2.2bn (£1.35bn) a year. From Dubai he allegedly provided customers with funds in a country of their choice. It is claimed his network was so extensive and lucrative that he often did not have to physically move money, a fact that made his detection all the more difficult, according to an investigative source.

Ian Cruxton, deputy director of Soca, said: "This operation is part of Soca's long-term strategy targeting specialist money launderers based overseas. These networks pay no attention to cultural or geographical barriers and launder money for organised crime groups from any ethnic background or criminal businesses, particularly UK, Pakistani and Turkish nationals based in the UK and mainland Europe involved in drugs trafficking."

Jain, also known as Naresh Patel, was arrested in April 2007 by Dubai police after a year-long international investigation. Much of the money he allegedly moved was by hawala, an informal honour-based money transfer system primarily based in the Middle East, east Africa and southern Asia.

According to the US department of justice's drug enforcement agency, police in Dubai made a number of searches of his property after his arrest and recovered banking and wire transfer records demonstrating that he was directing money transfers through banks and exchange houses in Dubai, into bank accounts at a finance company in Manhattan. The accounts of the company showed he was involved in "layering," a money laundering technique designed to disguise the origin of sham commodities trades.

The US government obtained a seizure warrant for the funds in the accounts as property involved in money laundering and this year a district judge ordered the forfeiture to the US of more than $4.3m. A further £1.5m in cash from Naresh's business dealings has been held around the world.

A two-year investigation in Italy revealed an alleged trail that suggested Naresh was laundering $4m a day, with heroin and terrorism cash coming in through a beauty parlour in Italy. The Italians and Americans say he was at the centre of a sprawling terror network that was taking in money for the Taliban as well as other criminal cartels.

While inquiries were being made into his activities, Naresh was bailed in Dubai – where he faces trial for breaking foreign exchange laws – and fled his business headquarters. He resurfaced in his native India, where authorities raided several properties owned by him and issued an all ports alert.

Two months ago he denied any involvement in money laundering and claimed he was a businessman who was being trapped. Speaking in New Delhi, Naresh said: "I have a factory in South Africa. I supply ready-made garments in Afghanistan and Nepal. I talked to people in Pakistan in relation with purchasing rice."

British authorities have secured an exclusion order preventing Naresh from entering the UK.

Source: The Guardian

Selasa, 05 Juni 2012

Ghana fingered in Australia massive identity fraud

Ghana has been named as one of the countries whose citizens are stealing the identities of Australians.

News out in the Australian media say the theft which is in a large scale involves spies, drug dealers, illegal immigrants and people engaged in money laundering.

The report say passport details of five people emailed to a travel agent for travel for people from Ghana has been found.

One report by the Herald Sun citing documents from the country’s Department of Foreign Affairs and trade says the illegal practice of forging passports of living Australians is widespread.

According to the report, a fake or doctored Australian passport has been found, on average, once a week in the past three years.

Fake passports were detected at ports in countries including Britain, Dubai, Ghana, Thailand, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Malaysia, Egypt, Turkey, and Peru, the report indicated.

According to the report, some of the passports were in the hands of spies, smugglers and thieves.

Australian passports were used in 525 frauds in the last financial year, and many people were caught lying to get a passport, it said.

Source: Citifmonline

Senin, 04 Juni 2012

Dead Men on UN Terror List Hinder Global Fight Against Al-Qaeda

Ahmad Zerfaoui is one of the world’s most wanted terrorists, according to the United Nations, which lists him as a member of al-Qaeda’s North African arm. It may be difficult to bring him to justice: He died three years ago. At least 42 dead people and as many as 69 defunct companies are among about 500 names on the UN’s list of alleged al-Qaeda and Taliban supporters, said Richard Barrett, who heads the world body’s committee monitoring sanctions on the groups and is working to clean up the register.


UN member states are reluctant to apply sanctions on the Taliban, al-Qaeda and their supporters because governments don’t know who on the list is a legitimate threat, Barrett said. The inaccuracies also hamper Obama administration efforts to motivate allies in the war on terrorism who don’t want to be seen as too close to the U.S., said Eric Rosand, a security analyst in New York.

“We turn to the UN for its global legitimacy, but if the UN tool is seen as illegitimate, you limit your effectiveness,” said Rosand, co-director of the Center on Global Counterterrorism Cooperation, an independent research group. “The UN has a lot of cachet where the U.S. is not appreciated.”

The list grew out of UN sanctions levied against the Taliban in 1999 after the Afghan Islamists refused to give up al-Qaeda operatives following the bombings of U.S. embassies in East Africa.

Assets and Travel

The sanctions, which require nations to freeze assets of those listed and bar them from travel and weapons transactions, were extended to al-Qaeda in 2000 and strengthened after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

“It was all a bit frantic after 9-11” and some names were added to the list that don’t belong, said Barrett.

All 15 Security Council nations must agree to add or remove any person or company from the register.

“There are dead people on the list and the committee can’t get them off,” Rosand said.

Groups on the list include Egyptian Islamic Jihad; branches of Saudi Arabia-based al-Haramain Islamic Foundation, which the UN called a main source of funds for al-Qaeda; and two honey shops and a bakery in Yemen whose owner was accused by the UN of being an al-Qaeda financier.

Thomas H. Nelson, an attorney for al-Haramain’s now- shuttered U.S. branch, called the terrorism accusation “ridiculous” in a phone interview from Welches, Oregon.

Barrett has removed 12 entities from the list this year. Some defunct companies are kept on to ensure they don’t revive, he said.

Death in Mali

Zerfaoui, who died in Mali in 2006, according to the UN, remains on the list because his name hasn’t come up for review.

“The problem with ‘dead’ people is proving that they are dead, particularly if they have died in ungoverned areas or countries where identities are uncertain and burials take place as soon as possible after death,” Barrett said in an e-mail.

Barrett, 60, a former officer of Britain’s MI6 spy agency, heads eight senior officials and about a dozen support staff from countries including Russia, France and the U.S., working from a midtown Manhattan office.

Many of Barrett’s security, intelligence and financial contacts are in countries that shy away from open cooperation with the U.S.

“This is a good way for the U.S. to get its agenda applied under a neutral flag,” said Barrett.

‘Significant Success’

Even with its flaws, the list helps the U.S. stifle al- Qaeda and the Taliban, said David S. Cohen, the Treasury’s assistant secretary for terrorist financing.

“We’ve had some significant success in degrading the financial facilitation networks by which al-Qaeda has been obtaining their funds,” he said in an interview.

Barrett said intelligence reports show al-Qaeda and the Taliban made several appeals for cash this year, a signal they are hurting from the sanctions. He said he didn’t have data from member states to show conclusively how much money has been seized under the sanctions.

Critics of the program including Jean-Charles Brisard, a former head of corporate intelligence at Paris-based Vivendi Universal SA, said the UN hasn’t kept up with terrorists’ financing methods. Since 2003, the amount of assets frozen and the number of names on the list has remained at about $80 million and 500 people, said Brisard, now a consultant for families of Sept. 11 victims.

“That’s quite ridiculous,” he said from Paris.

Legal Challenges

Countries have also been reluctant to enforce the sanctions out of concern the list won’t stand up to legal challenges, said Brisard and Barrett.

A Saudi businessman, Yassin Abdullah Kadi, also known as Yasin al-Qadi, who is on the list for allegedly supplying arms and funds to al-Qaeda and had his assets frozen, appealed to the European Court of Justice. The court ruled last year that the European Union regulations enforcing the UN sanctions denied his rights, including the right to judicial review. The asset freeze, the court said, was “an unjustified restriction” on property rights.

The council is discussing new rules on the listing and appeals process.

“For the sanctions to be efficient,” Barrett said, “they have to be respected.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Peter S. Green in New York at psgreen@bloomberg.net.

Source: Bloomberg

Jumat, 01 Juni 2012

Georgian crime boss sentenced in Spain for money laundering

A Spanish court on Tuesday convicted a top Georgian crime gang leader of money laundering and sentenced him to seven and a half years in jail.

Spain's top criminal court also slapped Zahar Kalashov, who was extradited to the country from Dubai in 2006, with a fine of 20 million euros (24.6 million dollars).


The court said he laundered money earned from criminal activities carried out in the former Soviet Union, such as kidnappings and the operation of illegal casinos, by investing in real estate and luxury cars in Spain.

It said he should be deported once he has served three-quarters of his sentence and will then be banned from entering Spain for a decade.

Public prosecutors had asked that Kalashov, who police suspect led the Georgian mafia in Spain, be sentenced to 12 years and two months behind bars.

Five other men who were detained as part of the same police investigation into the group were also convicted of money laundering at a separate trial last year and received prison sentences of between two and five years.

Kalashov fled Spain after police launched "Operation Wasp" in June 2005 which culminated in the arrests of 28 suspected members of his organisation from former Soviet states in Barcelona, Alicante and Malaga.

The swoop saw 800 bank accounts frozen and the impounding of luxury villas and vehicles along with the seizing of some 300,000 euros in cash.

Source: AFP

Kamis, 31 Mei 2012

FBI agents in town help fight cross-border crime

By Marie Magleby, Special to Gulf News
Published: May 31, 2008, 23:44

Abu Dhabi: Gary Price and Ernest Herbert carry FBI badges, but their job descriptions are significantly different here than in the US.

"I have no law enforcement authority here," Special Agent Price said.

Instead, the duo are go-betweens for local and US law enforcement. He said, "We work closely with UAE government officials to share information that protects the two countries."

They also offer training at the request of local authorities. The training involves many aspects of law enforcement, including ways to combat white-collar crime, violent crime, forensics and counter-terrorism.

In addition, the agents coordinate the Middle East Law Enforcement Training Centre in Dubai, which offers week-long courses for law enforcement personnel from around the Gulf.


Local authorities choose the topics and dates, and FBI specialists come from the US to teach the courses. Since its establishment in 2001, the centre, co-sponsored by the FBI and Dubai police, has conducted about 40 courses dealing with money laundering, computer crimes, intellectual property rights, kidnapping, auto theft, homicide, financial institution fraud, terrorist financing, hostage negotiations and more.

The globalisation of crime, especially financial and internet crime, places the agents in a pivotal position. "The UAE is an important crossroads for business and, as a result, also for crime," Price said of the potential for fraud or abuse in the banking system. With the help of local officials, they routinely seek to investigate bank records and track financial transactions linked to the US.

When internet crime is traced back to the US, the agents are also able to help. Just months ago, a prominent UAE citizen received a cyber threat from a location in the US.

Local law enforcement officials contacted Price and Herbert, who enlisted agents in the US to conduct an investigation. The man was arrested, charged and is now facing imprisonment.

About working with local authorities, Price said: "I truly enjoy working with the Emiratis. They are professional and very gracious." There are, however, obstacles. According to Price, a federal law that regulates "international judicial cooperation" is often misinterpreted to be a roadblock to investigations. "There is not a timely, quick way for law enforcement response because of the bureaucratic process," he said.

Law enforcement mechanisms do not always translate across cultures and borders, Herbert said in a similar vein. "Things are run differently here than in the US, so we have to do things differently."

When FBI agents are on international assignment, they assume the title of Legal Attaché in their respective embassies. Price and Herbert are successors to three other agents since the Abu Dhabi office opened in December 2003. They cover both the UAE and Oman. In the region, the FBI also has agents posted in Afghanistan, Egypt, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Yemen.

During his tenure, former FBI director Louis Freeh pushed to expand the bureau's international presence. It now has offices in 62 countries. This worldwide network of agents is a necessary countermeasure against the growing nexus of international crime. "Just as there are no borders for crime and terrorism, there can be no borders for justice and the rule of law," current director Robert Mueller told the US Senate in March.

Progress

"Twenty years ago, the idea of regularly communicating with our law enforcement counterparts around the world was as foreign as the internet or the mobile phone. Today, advances in technology, travel and communication have broken down walls between countries, continents and individuals," Mueller added. Price and Herbert embody this prog-ress.

Mueller became the dir-ector one week prior to the September 11, 2001 attacks.

The FBI began as a special agent force in 1908 and received its current title in 1935. Since its genesis, the FBI has seen its share of success and failure. Though it has successfully foiled numerous plots, conspiracies and espionage attempts, it has been criticised for shoddy investigation tactics and ignoring intelligence reports that could have prevented past attacks. Regardless, it has survived a century of challenges.

- The writer is a journalist based in Abu Dhabi.

Source: GulfNews

Charges still dog Benazir's husband

ISLAMABAD: Benazir Bhutto's husband, who took effective control of his slain wife's party yesterday, is a former cabinet minister who spent eight years in prison on corruption charges and is known as "Mr 10 Per Cent" for allegedly taking kickbacks.

In her will, read yesterday, Bhutto named Asif Ali Zardari as her successor as head of the Pakistan People's Party in case of her death. But Mr Zardari, who is viewed with suspicion by many Pakistanis, appointed his son, Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, as official chairman of the party that the 19-year-old's grandfather founded in 1967.

Mr Zardari, 54, who comes from a feudal family, shot to fame after his arranged marriage to Bhutto, who become prime minister for the first time in 1988, less than three months after giving birth to her son. Bhutto's husband is generally blamed for many of her political misfortunes, with her twice being forced out of the prime minister's office over allegations of corruption and misrule.

He was jailed for the first time in 1990 on charges ranging from murder to fraud when Bhutto's first government was dismissed. He was released in 1993 and acquitted of the charges, including the claim he tried to extort millions of dollars from a British man by attaching a bomb to his leg. Mr Zardari said the charges were politically motivated.

Mr Zardari became investment minister in Bhutto's second government, and was nicknamed "Mr 10 Per Cent" for allegedly skimming off commissions on government contracts.

He was jailed a second time in 1996 over corruption allegations and his alleged involvement in an attack on Bhutto's brother, Murtaza, who died in a shootout near his home in Karachi.

After years in prison Mr Zardari was freed in 2004 and left Pakistan to live with his family in the United Arab Emirates. He still faces charges at a Swiss court of money laundering. He is accused of siphoning off $US1.5 billion in kickbacks.

A Geneva magistrate convicted Bhutto and her husband in absentia of money laundering in 2003 under a Swiss law that empowers high-level investigators to impose penalties without a court hearing.

They received six-month suspended sentences and were ordered to pay $US11 million to the Pakistani Government, but the conviction was automatically thrown out when the pair contested it. They were then charged by another Swiss magistrate in 2004 and the case was reopened.

The Swiss investigation against Bhutto for alleged money-laundering was declared closed after her assassination last week, although the parallel investigation against her husband remains open.

Swiss authorities said in 1998 they found about 20 million Swiss francs in Swiss accounts belonging to Bhutto and her family. These accounts were frozen at Pakistan's request.

"Zardari is not very much liked in the party. He goes for big hotels, world's best addresses. He wants to live like a prince abroad," said Rafiq Safi, a longtime party activist.

Mr Zardari also has many critics in the West, which could further complicate US hopes that President Pervez Musharraf and the PPP might form a coalition that would unify moderate forces in Pakistan against extremism.

"The US is not going to be excited about working with Zardari," Daniel Markey, fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, told The Washington Post.

AP

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,22991942-2703,00.html

Money Laundering: When proceeds from fraud enter the financial system

“We have always tried to create better ways to curb crime, but criminals find alternative ways to beat the system: JAI BANDA of Dr Mtambo Law Firm investigated some of money laundering cases in 2007.

CONTRARY to the zero tolerance rhetoric by President Bingu wa Mutharika revelations from Transparency International indicated that the problem of corruption was getting worse in the country thereby increasing the possibility of laundering the proceeds of crime through the country’s financial systems.

There were many money laundering cases in Malawi from June to December last year that included fraud, drug trafficking, theft, robbery and tax evasion.


Fraud
Of significance during the period was insurance fraud. The Insurance Association on of Malawi warned the public to be on the look out as fraudulent acts were on the increase in the insurance industry. The Association went on to place flyers in the local dailies in which they stated that the fraud involved people of many disciplines which included lawyers, police officers and staff from insurance companies.

In the course of investigations one lawyer, who spoke on condition of anonymity, did reveal that it was true that there were indeed some lawyers who connived with hospital staff and police to issue false reports for processing by Insurance companies. The funds obtained from such kind of frauds are laundered as legitimate payments from insurers.

Chairman of the Insurance Association against fraud Eric Chapola further argued that the racket was manifested through fake documents issued by the professionals. Policemen would collude with fraudsters to issue fake police reports while medical officers would issue hospital reports and lawyers would push insurance companies to pay such fake claims.

The Medical Aid Society of Malawi (Masm) is another institution which during the period was hit by massive fraud. In the months of October and November the Society faced huge increases in dubious claims forcing the country’s health insurance provider to pay up to K80 million (US$ 571428.60). The Sales and Marketing Manager for MASM Andrew Ngomwa attributed the staggering figure to suspected high cases of fraud.

Health Insurance fraud ranges from doctors billing insurers service than the core performed (this is called “up coding”). The doctors provide services such as tests, surgeries and other procedures that are not necessary in order to get additional payment. Other fraudulent tactics include

Drug trafficking

An interview with the Officer In-Charge of the Police Station in the small town of Limbe revealed that Indian hemp in Malawi is mainly for export to the neighbouring countries. A 90 kilogramme bag is sold at K100, 000.00 (US$714.28) in Mozambique. Naturally the money realised from the sale of the indian hemp has to be injected into the formal system.

In July, police in Chileka impounded 80 bags of indian hemp weighing 90 kilogrammes and nine others weighing 50 kilogrammes each. The indian hemp was loaded in a three tonne lorry. The indian hemp was impounded in Lirangwe on its way to Blantyre from Nkhotakota .

In September, two men were arrested at Thabwa road block leading to the Southern Town of Nsanje which borders Mozambique with 16 cartons of indian hemp weighing a total of more than 100 kilogrammes and in November Blantyre police acting on a tip off impounded 23 bags of indian hemp weighing 90 kilogrammes each from a lodge situated on the outskirts of the City of Blantyre.

The above cases just show the magnitude of indian hemp being caught in transit in Malawi. The proceeds of the indian hemp are available to the drug trafficker for laundering. The police indicated that most of the indian hemp from Malawi is exported to the Republic of South Africa which gives rise to outgoing money laundering.

Theft and robbery

Money for laundering is at times derived from proceeds of robberies. In June armed men stole at gunpoint a Nissan Double Cabin vehicle. Mzuzu police confirmed that Mzuzu the capital city of the North had a spate of carjacking especially targeting twin cab vehicles. The vehicles are driven across the border using unchartered roots to Zambia and Tanzania and are sold. The monies realised are eventually laundered in these countries as proceeds of business.

In July in the central region of Malawi in Ntcheu two men were sentenced to fourteen years for motor vehicle theft. The two were arrested in Mozambique where they wanted to sell the car. It can be safely assumed the two in addition to bringing hard cash they could have brought goods from Mozambique. Favourite goods from Mozambique include liquor, macaroni and other food stuffs and a number of motor vehicles thieves are believed to indulge in cross border trade.

During the period it was not only motor vehicles which were robbed. In September armed robbers went away with K2,000,000.00 (US$14285.71) after raiding Metro Cash ‘n’ Carry depot in Blantyre. Similarly during the same month police arrested two security guards deployed at a construction company on allegations that they connived on the theft of K7,000,000.00 (US$50 000) meant for salaries. A visit was undertaken to the robbed premises in a town called Phalombe wherein the robbed company’s personnel indicated that they believed money realised from the robbery had been exported to Mozambique.

Tax evasion
On June 12, 2007 the Malawi Revenue Authority (MRA) held a press conference in Blantyre where it stated that they had uncovered three schemes some tax evaders used when importing cars and flat television screens. The tax authority revealed that they had seized three vehicles and 80 TFT LCT – TV Screens. MRA Deputy Director of Investigations and Audit Emmanuel Kaluluma said the evader marked the cartons “computer monitor” to evade tax. The scheme was exposed when MRA officials conducted a risk check. The tax evader took advantage of a policy government set that allows importation of computers duty free except for Value Added Tax. Had the scheme not been uncovered the evaders would have reaped off government K9 000 000.00 (US$ 64285.71) if they had been successful in the racket.

In another racket, a Malawian national only identified as Burton was on May 27 hired by a fellow Malawian based in South Africa, Deckerman Gumbi to drive a Toyota Fortunar into the country with fake a Malawian registration number CK 7618. What this tax evader did was to pretend as if the vehicle went out of Malawi and it was returning home through Mwanza border post. Investigations discovered that it was just a new vehicle being imported into the country. The tax collecting body was going to lose K3 400 000.00 (US$ 24285.71) in revenue in this racket which sum would have been laundered as legitimate funds.

Corruption
Corruption is another predicate offence which yields money for laundering. In the town of Mzuzu, the Mzuzu Chief Resident Magistrate convicted a policeman who sought money in order to release and drop criminal charges against three suspects. He solicited K6,000 (US$ 42.85) as an inducement to drop criminal charges.

In September President Bingu Wa Mutharika disclosed that government was investigating Minister of Information and Civic Education Patricia Kaliati on corruption allegations on the way she handled the Nyika-Vwaza conservation concession tender process when she was Minister of Tourism. The Member of Parliament for Mzimba West Loveness Gondwe had questioned the circumstances surrounding the Nyika-Vwaza Eco Tourism in Parliament accusing Kaliati of taking kickbacks from one of the bidders an investor from the United Arab Emirates.

The views expressed in this article are those of the author and not necessarily of Blantyre Newspapers Limited (BNL).

http://www.dailytimes.bppmw.com/article.asp?ArticleID=8146

Rabu, 30 Mei 2012

Satyam Wins Pegasystems Partner Innovation Award for AML Solution

October 30, 2007: 12:33 PM EST

HYDERABAD, India, Oct. 30 /PRNewswire/ -- Satyam Computer Services Ltd. , a leading global consulting and IT services provider, announced today that it won the 2007 Pegasystems Partner Innovation Award in financial services. The announcement was made at PegaWORLD 2007, Pegasystems' annual conference, and one of the business process management (BPM) industry's flagship events.

Satyam won the esteemed award for its advanced Anti-Money Laundering (AML) solution, which enables financial institutions to intelligently track, manage and quickly resolve potentially fraudulent and criminal activity with greater speed and accuracy and to comply with stricter AML regulations. Satyam used Pegasystems' SmartBPM(R) Suite to create the new solution, which addresses a critical and underserved need in the market.

"Financial institutions now have an innovative way to fight fraud and financial crime, as well as stay in compliance with BSA/AML/KYCC statutes," said Anil Kumar, the Global Head of Satyam's Financial Services Business.

Integration among Satyam experts accelerated the solution's development and deployment.

"Satyam's business process management and banking experts leveraged Pegasystems' SmartBPM platform to rapidly deliver an advanced solution without additional and costly software development," said Joseph Lagioia, head of Satyam's Consulting and Enterprise Solutions Practice. "We are very proud and pleased to win this prestigious honor."

Satyam's AML solution optimizes a financial institution's existing transaction-monitoring systems-detecting suspicious activity such as the deposit of very large sums, multiple accounts for the same person, and suspicious names-while at the same time minimizing the number of false positives, which has been a nagging problem in the past. The solution also allows financial institutions to recognize suspicious transactions quickly, rather than waiting until the end of the day, which is the norm for institutions using case management systems.

"Satyam combines superior subject matter expertise in financial services with deep understanding of Pegasystems technology to deliver truly innovative business solutions in an accelerated fashion," said Douglas Kim, managing director of Global Alliances and Business Development for Pegasystems. "We're proud of our long-standing relationship with Satyam and are delighted to recognize them with this award."

About Satyam

Satyam , a leading global business and information technology services company, delivers consulting, systems integration, and outsourcing solutions to clients in 20 industries and 57 countries.

Satyam leverages deep industry and functional expertise, leading technology practices, and an advanced, global delivery model to help clients transform their highest-value business processes and improve their business performance. The company's 45,700* professionals excel in engineering and product development, supply chain management, client relationship management, business process quality, business intelligence, enterprise integration, and infrastructure management, among other key capabilities.

Satyam development and delivery centers in the US, Canada, Brazil, the UK, Hungary, Egypt, UAE, India, China, Malaysia, Singapore, and Australia serve 599* clients, 173 of which are Fortune Global 500 and Fortune US 500 corporations. For more information, see http://www.satyam.com.

*As of Sept. 30, 2007

Safe Harbor

This press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of section 27A of Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. The forward-looking statements contained herein are subject to certain risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those reflected in the forward- looking statements. Satyam undertakes no duty to update any forward-looking statements. For a discussion of the risks associated with our business, please see the discussions under the heading "Risk Factors" in our report on Form 6-K concerning the quarter ended June 30, 2006, furnished to the United States Securities Exchange Commission on July 28, 2006 and the other reports filed with the Securities Exchange Commission from time to time. These filings are available at http://www.sec.gov.

http://money.cnn.com/news/newsfeeds/articles/prnewswire/DCTU00430102007-1.htm

Selasa, 29 Mei 2012

DFSA: The watchdog fighting financial crimes

By Faisal Masudi, Staff Reporter

The regulator of the Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC) is joining forces with global agencies in order to fight money laundering.

Bryan Stirewalt, Director of Supervision, DIFC, said the Dubai Financial Services Authority (DFSA) is a young entity – so criminals may regard it as exploitable, at least initially.

"But people with less than good intentions will find out it’s not the case," he said.

Since 2004, when the DFSA was set up, around 25 Suspicious Transaction Reports were filed with the UAE Central Bank by DIFC-registered companies.

DFSA has agreements with counterparts in 30 countries to fight financial crimes. The DFSA meets the standards of international anti-money laundering groups like the Paris-based Financial Action Task Force (FATF). Stirewalt said bilateral agreements, global reviews and in-house laws should put the business environment at DIFC through DFSA on a par with New York, London and Hong Kong.

http://www.xpress4me.com/news/uae/dubai/20007735.html

UAE Regulations curb hawala transfers

The initiative of the UAE Central Bank to establish a registration and supervisory system for hawala brokers to tackle money laundering and terrorist financing has been eliciting some response from the target group in the past few years, according a top official of the bank.

Speaking at the Money Transfer Dubai Conference 2008 yesterday, Abdul Rahim Mohammad Al Awadi, assistant executive director and head of anti-money laundering and suspicious cases unit of the UAE, said the number of applicants to obtain a hawaladar (hawala broker) certificate reached 369, of which 265 were issued the certificate and the remaining 104 are in the process of compliance requirements.

The Hawala Regulation System was put in place following the international co-nference on hawala in may 2002 and the Abu Dhabi Declaration on Hawala.

The central bank, according to Al Awadi, has been holding regular meetings with the hawala brokers urging them of the importance of the sound application of the system and the need to report suspicioustransactions to the bank.

Sudhir Kumar Shetty, chief operating officer, Global Operations, UAE Exchange puts hawala transactions in the Gulf to 5 per cent as against 95 per cent by the formal channels. "Ten or 15 years ago, Hawala thrived because it used to be faster and it is used cheaper," he points out.

http://www.amlosphere.com/asia/legislation/regulations-curb-hawala-transfers.html

Senin, 28 Mei 2012

UAE: Hawala money transfers defy regulation efforts

by Gregor McClenaghan and Suleman Din

A traditional system of transferring funds linked with money laundering and the financing of terrorism is flourishing in the hands of illegal traders despite official attempts at regulation.

Hawala is a trust-based system used to transfer funds across countries and continents. It is used legitimately by millions of people worldwide but has been identified by the US State Department and law enforcement agencies as a potential way for criminals to launder money and is illegal in some countries.

In the UAE, the money handlers, or hawaladars, are required to register with the Central Bank, keep records of the identities of their customers and alert authorities to any suspicious transactions.

However, many continue to trade without registering. There are currently no specific penalties for running an unregistered hawala business and the traders who spoke on condition of anonymity said there was little incentive to register. “We are not registered, nobody is registered here,” said one shop owner in the centre of the city. “Every textile shop is doing hawala. It is how people make most of their money.”

Tens of thousands of dirhams change hands every day, traders say. Their customers are mostly taxi drivers and labourers and the average hawala user sends home between Dh1,500 (US$409) and Dh1,800 every month. Many customers also use the hawaladars as banks, making regular deposits and letting them know how much to send home at the end of the month.

“It is the quickest, best way to send money home,” said one labourer, who sends the bulk of his earnings to his family in Pakistan. “Up to Dh5,000 you can send home and they only charge Dh10, maximum.”

The system can also be used to bypass official foreign exchanges and banks. Earlier this month, the Central Bank further tightened rules on money transfers by ordering financial institutions to register the details of anyone wiring or changing as little as Dh2,000.

Abdulrahim Mohamed al Awadi, the head of the anti-money laundering and suspicious cases unit at the Central Bank, said the country was leading international efforts to regulate hawala. He said the registration system was preventing money laundering and terrorist financing, but still allowed workers to send money home cheaply.

Since 2002, when the UAE organised the first international conference on hawala, more than 260 traders have registered, and more than 100 applications are pending.

“We are applying one of the basic criteria of due diligence in international finance – know your customer and know your business,” Mr Awadi said. “The hawaladars go through an interview with the Central Bank and, once registered, they have to disclose the names of their customer, the purpose of the remittance, the name of the receiver on the other end and other details. They also have to disclose any suspicious transactions.”

In a report on money laundering released in March, the US State Department said that there had not been any reports of suspicious transactions by hawaladars in the UAE since the registration scheme started in 2002.

Mr Awadi said the UAE did not want to outlaw hawala completely, as Saudi Arabia and Qatar had done, as that would penalise the workers who relied on it. “Hawala business has existed in the world for years,” he said. “It is designed for blue-collar workers, low-income people, especially those coming from remote areas where they don’t have a banking infrastructure.”

He confirmed, however, that there was no information available on how many hawaladars were trading without a licence. “I wish I knew,” he said. “If they are not registered they are in violation. They have to fulfil the requirements. At this point in time, if someone persisted, that’s a judicial matter.”

Hawaladars said it was relatively easy to continue their business under the radar. “It is easy to avoid scrutiny,” one textile shop owner said when asked what happened to the large amounts of cash he collected through hawala. “The banks don’t ask questions about deposits under Dh40,000. Over that amount, and they will ask where the money came from. You put the money in the account you have for your business and take it out when your customers ask for it.”

Hawaladars said that inflation was cutting deep into their profits. “We’re not making any money here,” one hawaladar said. “Because the cost of everything is going up so much, nobody has any money left over to send back home.”

Source: The National

Jumat, 25 Mei 2012

UAE: New X-ray machines target smugglers

by Matthew Chung

Powerful enough to spot a box of cigarettes inside a packed lorry, the UAE’s new X-ray machines at the border with Saudi Arabia may keep the average smuggler awake at night.

The Government last week installed one of four newly acquired heavy-duty machines at the Gheweifat border post, as part of a plan to improve border security over the next two years. All the country’s border crossings, as well as Abu Dhabi International Airport and Mina Zayed Port, will eventually be equipped with similar machines.

Howard Nortcliffe, the senior equipment engineer for General Administration of Customs, said the X-ray machines would give customs officers a better chance of detecting contraband inside large consignments of cargo: “They can actually detect a cigarette packet within the carton.”

He added that the images delivered by the high-energy beams, which reflect off organic material, were of almost photographic quality. “Previously, it would have been a basic blur.”

In addition to the heavy-duty machines for lorries, the Government’s order also included four smaller, low-energy machines for passenger vehicles and one large, low-energy, drive-through machine for lorries.

It also purchased three “mobile” low-energy machines that will be operated from vans that scan vehicles by driving around them.

The low-energy machines expose people to very little radiation, so they can remain in their vehicles. The radiation from “one scan is the equivalent to flying for 15 minutes at 30,000 feet in an aircraft”, Mr Nortcliffe said. The total cost of the purchase, from a US company, American Science and Engineering, was about Dh202 million (US$55m).

About 1,400 lorries enter Abu Dhabi daily at the Gheweifat crossing.

Of those, about 20 per cent are empty, said Michael Krstic, a customs adviser with the General Administration of Customs. An additional 40 per cent are now pre-cleared to reduce waiting times at the border.

Two years ago, every lorry making the crossing was made to queue, Mr Krstic said.

“There is a huge modernisation [programme] to bring Abu Dhabi into the forefront of good security. The whole idea is to facilitate trade, to get these lorries and goods through the border as quickly as possible. The more equipment we’ve got, the less hold-ups.”

Customs now also has a team in place to investigate apparently isolated incidents to determine if they are part of a bigger smuggling operation.

“We now have the ability to take a single incident and do a strategic assessment for all of Abu Dhabi,” Mr Krstic said.

Customs officials also recently seized a large amount of antidepressant pills being smuggled across the border.

Customs said its top priorities were stopping drugs from entering the country, as well as weapons and ammunition and explosive materials. Security is also a top priority, with officials focusing on money laundering and the financing of terrorism.

Source: The National