News (Media Awareness Project) - International:15 Countries Named As Potential Money-Laundering Havens |
Title: | International:15 Countries Named As Potential Money-Laundering Havens |
Published On: | 2000-06-23 |
Source: | New York Times (NY) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-03 18:39:21 |
15 COUNTRIES NAMED AS POTENTIAL MONEY-LAUNDERING HAVENS By JOSEPH KAHN
WASHINGTON, June 22 -- The world's leading industrial nations named 15
countries and territories today, including Israel, the Philippines and
Russia, as potential havens for ill-gotten wealth. The list is the
culmination of a decade-long effort to act against money-laundering centers.
It was issued after United States and European officials grew concerned that
bank secrecy and weak regulation in some nations contributed to the
devastating financial turmoil in Asia and Latin America in the late 1990's.
The action does not punish the named countries or cut them from the world
financial system. But it effectively warns banks and brokerage houses to
scrutinize all financial transactions with customers in those countries as
possibly linked to crime or high-risk transactions.
The United States and several European nations said they would follow up
with bank advisories and criminal sanctions that would have the effect of
driving legitimate financial business from the listed centers, depriving
them of a lucrative source of tax revenue.
Most of the havens were well known in banking circles, but wealthy nations
had not agreed to identify them publicly. One concern was diplomatic
protocol. Some countries, like Israel and Russia, have long been spared
serious scrutiny because of their influence. Some smaller island nations and
territories relied on former colonial masters like Britain and France to
protect them from criticism.
The list of "noncooperative" nations was drawn up by the Financial Action
Task Force, a body created in 1989 by the Group of 7 wealthy countries to
fight money laundering.
The listed countries and territories are the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands,
the Cook Islands, Dominica, Israel, Lebanon, Liechtenstein, the Marshall
Islands, Nauru, Niue, Panama, the Philippines, Russia, St. Kitts and Nevis
and St. Vincent and the Grenadines.
Switzerland, which has a reputation for jealously guarding banking
customers' identities with a numbered system, no longer shields criminal
assets and generally cooperates with foreign investigators, United States
officials said. It is a member of the group that drew up the list.
Governments decided to pressure laundering centers in part because the sheer
volume of transactions by drug cartels, mafias and corrupt officials has
expanded dramatically, to at least $600 billion a year, United States
officials said.
The greater impetus was from a succession of market-shaking crises made
possible, the thinking goes, by the ease of moving giant sums of money
around the globe without oversight. Speculators used financial havens to
shield themselves from scrutiny as they focused on Asian and Latin American
currencies, government officials said.
Destabilizing capital flight from Russia, most notably the $7 billion
handled by the Bank of New York and investigated by United States officials
last year, was impossible to stop, because some nations, including Russia,
did not have laws against laundering.
Closer to home, leading banks and regulators knew little about transactions
that Long-Term Capital Management, a giant Connecticut hedge fund, had
worked on because the fund did much of its business through offshore
centers. Long-Term Capital melted down in late 1998, rattling markets and
prompting a $3.6 billion Wall Street bailout.
Treasury Secretary Lawrence H. Summers, who made combating laundering and
tax evasion a high priority for the Clinton administration, hailed the list.
Washington "welcomes this landmark step to limit the capacity of drug
dealers, terrorists, organized criminals and corrupt foreign officials to
launder their ill-gotten gains through safe havens," Mr. Summers said.
The final list was selected from 29 nations or territories that do not
criminalize laundering or that have serious deficiencies in their banking
regulation. The other 14, including Cyprus, Gibraltar and Malta, have
reformed their systems or passed legislation to do so.
Israel, which has a first-world system in most respects, appeared on the
list because its Parliament has failed to pass legislation to make
laundering illegal and to set up an enforcement mechanism, United States
officials said.
Some Israeli politicians have opposed tough money-laundering laws, arguing
that Russian Jews, who have transferred billions of dollars to Israel in
recent years, might be less willing to do so, sacrificing Israel's status as
a financial haven.
Clinton administration officials said they hoped that Israel would act on
laundering legislation soon.
Finance Minister Laurent Fabius of France said his country would lobby other
industrialized nations to pressure the 15 havens if they do not act to be
taken off the list. One option, Mr. Fabius told reporters, is to ban all
financial transactions between those countries and banks and brokerage
houses elsewhere.
Jonathan M. Winer, a former State Department official who specialized in
fighting money laundering, said most major nations preferred to jawbone
financial havens behind closed doors and long resisted the so-called "name
and shame" approach.
Several nations objected to being on the list. Many issued no formal
statements. Officials in Liechtenstein said it was being unfairly singled
out for practices that are common elsewhere.
A statement by the Cayman Islands said that it was "astonished" that it was
on the list after having worked hard to comply with demands from the task
force. The government said that it had repeatedly invited representatives of
the group to visit the Caribbean territory, but that the invitation had been
ignored.
"While no one can claim to be perfect," Financial Secretary George McCarthy
said, "we are entitled to be accorded reasonable opportunity to make our
case."
The Bahamas issued a similar statement.
WASHINGTON, June 22 -- The world's leading industrial nations named 15
countries and territories today, including Israel, the Philippines and
Russia, as potential havens for ill-gotten wealth. The list is the
culmination of a decade-long effort to act against money-laundering centers.
It was issued after United States and European officials grew concerned that
bank secrecy and weak regulation in some nations contributed to the
devastating financial turmoil in Asia and Latin America in the late 1990's.
The action does not punish the named countries or cut them from the world
financial system. But it effectively warns banks and brokerage houses to
scrutinize all financial transactions with customers in those countries as
possibly linked to crime or high-risk transactions.
The United States and several European nations said they would follow up
with bank advisories and criminal sanctions that would have the effect of
driving legitimate financial business from the listed centers, depriving
them of a lucrative source of tax revenue.
Most of the havens were well known in banking circles, but wealthy nations
had not agreed to identify them publicly. One concern was diplomatic
protocol. Some countries, like Israel and Russia, have long been spared
serious scrutiny because of their influence. Some smaller island nations and
territories relied on former colonial masters like Britain and France to
protect them from criticism.
The list of "noncooperative" nations was drawn up by the Financial Action
Task Force, a body created in 1989 by the Group of 7 wealthy countries to
fight money laundering.
The listed countries and territories are the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands,
the Cook Islands, Dominica, Israel, Lebanon, Liechtenstein, the Marshall
Islands, Nauru, Niue, Panama, the Philippines, Russia, St. Kitts and Nevis
and St. Vincent and the Grenadines.
Switzerland, which has a reputation for jealously guarding banking
customers' identities with a numbered system, no longer shields criminal
assets and generally cooperates with foreign investigators, United States
officials said. It is a member of the group that drew up the list.
Governments decided to pressure laundering centers in part because the sheer
volume of transactions by drug cartels, mafias and corrupt officials has
expanded dramatically, to at least $600 billion a year, United States
officials said.
The greater impetus was from a succession of market-shaking crises made
possible, the thinking goes, by the ease of moving giant sums of money
around the globe without oversight. Speculators used financial havens to
shield themselves from scrutiny as they focused on Asian and Latin American
currencies, government officials said.
Destabilizing capital flight from Russia, most notably the $7 billion
handled by the Bank of New York and investigated by United States officials
last year, was impossible to stop, because some nations, including Russia,
did not have laws against laundering.
Closer to home, leading banks and regulators knew little about transactions
that Long-Term Capital Management, a giant Connecticut hedge fund, had
worked on because the fund did much of its business through offshore
centers. Long-Term Capital melted down in late 1998, rattling markets and
prompting a $3.6 billion Wall Street bailout.
Treasury Secretary Lawrence H. Summers, who made combating laundering and
tax evasion a high priority for the Clinton administration, hailed the list.
Washington "welcomes this landmark step to limit the capacity of drug
dealers, terrorists, organized criminals and corrupt foreign officials to
launder their ill-gotten gains through safe havens," Mr. Summers said.
The final list was selected from 29 nations or territories that do not
criminalize laundering or that have serious deficiencies in their banking
regulation. The other 14, including Cyprus, Gibraltar and Malta, have
reformed their systems or passed legislation to do so.
Israel, which has a first-world system in most respects, appeared on the
list because its Parliament has failed to pass legislation to make
laundering illegal and to set up an enforcement mechanism, United States
officials said.
Some Israeli politicians have opposed tough money-laundering laws, arguing
that Russian Jews, who have transferred billions of dollars to Israel in
recent years, might be less willing to do so, sacrificing Israel's status as
a financial haven.
Clinton administration officials said they hoped that Israel would act on
laundering legislation soon.
Finance Minister Laurent Fabius of France said his country would lobby other
industrialized nations to pressure the 15 havens if they do not act to be
taken off the list. One option, Mr. Fabius told reporters, is to ban all
financial transactions between those countries and banks and brokerage
houses elsewhere.
Jonathan M. Winer, a former State Department official who specialized in
fighting money laundering, said most major nations preferred to jawbone
financial havens behind closed doors and long resisted the so-called "name
and shame" approach.
Several nations objected to being on the list. Many issued no formal
statements. Officials in Liechtenstein said it was being unfairly singled
out for practices that are common elsewhere.
A statement by the Cayman Islands said that it was "astonished" that it was
on the list after having worked hard to comply with demands from the task
force. The government said that it had repeatedly invited representatives of
the group to visit the Caribbean territory, but that the invitation had been
ignored.
"While no one can claim to be perfect," Financial Secretary George McCarthy
said, "we are entitled to be accorded reasonable opportunity to make our
case."
The Bahamas issued a similar statement.
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