Showing posts with label Netherlands. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Netherlands. Show all posts
on Saturday, June 16, 2012
Corrupt officials and company executives in China transfer their assets overseas through at least eight channels, according to a report released on Monday by the Anti-Money Laundering Monitoring and Analysis Center set up by the People's Bank of China.

Often a combination of legal and illegal channels is used to make cross-border transfers of ill-gotten gains, the report said.

The eight main channels are smuggling cash, underground banking services, trade under current accounts, overseas investment, credit cards, offshore financial centers, direct overseas payments and payments to family members or lovers living overseas.

However, the exact amount of assets transferred overseas, since Chinese officials on corruption charges began to flee the country at the end of the 1980s, remains a mystery, said the report.

The report quotes statistics released by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, which estimate that up to 800 billion yuan ($123 billion) has been transferred overseas by fleeing or missing officials and company executives since the mid-1990s.

The cross-border transfer of such assets causes huge losses to the country as the majority cannot be recovered and their whereabouts are hard to find, the report added.

The report also provided details about the destinations for corrupt officials and businesspeople.

People with a higher rank or larger assets tended to flee to Western countries such as the United States, Canada, Australia and the Netherlands.

Those who cannot reach Western countries directly, use Hong Kong or some small countries in Africa, East Europe and Latin America as a stopover.

Those with lower rankings or smaller assets often find safe havens in China's neighboring countries such as Thailand, Myanmar, Malaysia, Mongolia and Russia.

Source: China Daily
on Saturday, June 9, 2012
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
on Thursday, May 31, 2012
Surinamese businessman Bidjai Parmessar, 43, was acquitted of all drug charges by a high court in The Hague, the Netherlands Monday, but he has been sentenced for money laundering.

Parmessar, who Surinamese and Dutch judicial authorities believed to be the biggest drug lord in Suriname, was arrested in 2005 in Paramaribo but, since the Surinamese-born businessman holds Dutch nationality, he was extradited to the Netherlands for prosecution.

In 2006 a court in Rotterdam sentenced him to a 10-year jail term for two cases of drug trafficking in 1995 and 2002. Parmessar was among others charged with allegedly leading a criminal organisation, drug trafficking, money-laundering and forgery.

The former owner of several casinos, liquor stores, car sales and money transfer offices in Paramaribo was accused of organising large cocaine shipments from Columbia to Suriname, which were eventually trafficked to Europe, especially to the Netherlands.

Over six years of investigations, including over 160,000 phone taps during the so-called ‘Ficus Operation’, which cost the Dutch judicial authorities around euros 7 million in 2005, have resulted in numerous arrests in Suriname and the Netherlands.

Owners and managers of the so-called Yokohama Group of Companies, which operates casinos, cambios, money transfer offices, car sales and liquor stores in Suriname, were suspected of belonging to a criminal organisation.

This organization allegedly smuggled enormous quantities of cocaine from Suriname to Holland and laundered the revenues through their companies in both countries. Several of the suspects were subsequently sentenced to serve time or community service.

In 2006, Parmessar appealed his sentence. The higher court dismissed the drug charges on Monday due to a lack of evidence, but stated that his involvement in the money-laundering scam has been established sufficiently and therefore sentenced him to a 4 year and 6 months prison term.

The accused, who was released in 2007 pending the hearing, has been ordered to report to the prison authorities to serve the remaining 8 months of the jail term.

Parmessar’s defence lawyers expressed satisfaction with the ruling, since the drug trafficking sentence by the lower court has now been dismissed. However, they said that the conviction related to money-laundering charges came about due to the scope and complexity of the case. They believe that the Court in the Hague does not understand the differences between the Surinamese and Dutch legal systems and as a result their client was sentenced to jail.

According to attorney Nico Meijering, his client would have never been sentenced in Suriname for his alleged involvement in the money-laundering scam.

The court has established that the businessman was involved in the laundering of euros 60,000 through a money transfer office in the Netherlands he had close ties with. Meijering also contends that even if Parmessar was the manager of the money transfer office in the Netherlands he could never have known about the illegal activities of his personnel since he was running his businesses from his offices in Paramaribo.

http://www.caribbeannetnews.com/news-5726--36-36--.html
on Saturday, May 19, 2012
The director of the Financial Supervisory Bureau , Folkert Winkel, says notaries are operating in 30 criminal networks in the Netherlands. He believes only five of these networks at most are known to the authorities. Mr Folkert's organisation monitors whether notaries, lawyers and accountants keep to the government's rules aimed at combatting money laundering.

He says the criminal networks deal in the quick purchase and sale of houses, with the result that the values of the properties are artificially raised. Mortgage brokers are also misled by false valuations. He suspects that notaries work as advisers to the criminal organisations and are complicit in fraud and money laundering.

As the law now stands, the Financial Supervisory Bureau is not allowed to hand over its information on the networks to the prosecution authorities. Justice Minister Ernst Hirsch Ballin is working on proposals to widen the bureau's remit.

Source: Radio Netherlands
The Netherlands is concerned about the increasing influence of Al Qaida in North Africa. The Hague wants to step up its partnership with Algeria against terrorism, Foreign Minister Maxime Verhagen told the Lower House on Friday.

As far as international terrorism is concerned, "the most important threat unabatedly comes from Islamic terrorist groupings including Al Qaida," according to Verhagen. "Al Qaida's influence has unfortunately increased in the border area of Afghanistan and Pakistan in the past year." However, "the threat has increased specifically in the North Africa/Sahel region," Verhagen adds.

Elementary for success in Afghanistan "is a clear approach by Pakistan". Media and experts say that the Pakistani government is too conciliatory and negotiates from a position of weakness, according to the minister. "The fear exists that a safe haven for terrorists will thereby again be permitted in the tribal areas. The Dutch government shares this concern."

In North Africa, the linking up of the Groupe Salafiste pour la Predication et le Combat (GSPC) with Al Qaida has led to the emergence of the AQIM terrorist group. This has drawn attention to itself recently via some bloody attacks. "Organisations like AQIM also have network contacts in countries in Western Europe, and recent arrests in Austria and Germany show they also form a potential threat to the Netherlands."

Due to the regional mutual links between North African countries, Verhagen considers it "important to work closely with countries like Morocco and Algeria to reduce terrorism in the region and the influence of AQIM." Cooperation with Morocco has been stepped up in the past year. "The Netherlands is now in talks with Algeria to arrive at a similar partnership arrangement." This focuses on tackling radicalisation via the Internet and in prisons, and tackling the financing of terrorism, document fraud and detection of explosives.

In general, Verhagen places "great value on tackling the underlying factors" that contribute to extremism and terrorism. For this, he has three policy goals. These are "fostering the dialogue between cultures, encouraging reforms in Islamic/Arabic countries and removing the negative perceptions of the West in the Islamic/Arabic world, among other means by using public diplomacy." In combating terrorism, "respect for human rights is paramount."

Meanwhile, Verhagen is working on an anti-terrorism institute to be based in the Netherlands. CDA MP Coruz requested this in a Lower House motion in April. According to Verhagen, "the government will carry out further research to achieve this. I hope to be able to tell you more about this within a few months," he wrote to the House.

Source: NISNEWS
on Thursday, May 17, 2012
BUCHAREST, Romania (AP) - Anti-corruption prosecutors began an investigation Thursday into top soccer officials involving money laundering and tax evasion in the transfer of Romanian players to foreign clubs.

The prosecutors say the state should have received ¤1.7 million (US$2.5 million) in revenue and tax if the actual amounts of money received in the transfers
had been registered in the accounts of the clubs.

Romanian prosecutors pieced together information about finances related to soccer deals from countries such as the Netherlands, Spain, Italy, China and South Korea. They say 12 players were transferred to foreign clubs for bigger amounts of money than stated in the accounts.

Ten people are under investigation, including Rapid Bucharest chairman Gheorghe Copos and Dinamo chairman Cristi Borcea. The 10 are accused of diverting more than ¤10 million (US$14.6 million) to bank accounts of offshore companies from the Virgin Islands and the Netherlands to avoid paying the full tax.

Soccer is one of the most popular sports in Romania, but it has recently been marred by claims of corruption and match-fixing.

http://www.pr-inside.com/romanian-soccer-investigated-for-tax-r391755.htm
on Saturday, May 5, 2012
BRUSSELS, June 5 (Reuters) - Fifteen European Union states including financial centres Germany and France have been given a final warning for failing to update their rules aimed at choking off finance for terrorist activities, the bloc's executive said.

"If there is no satisfactory reply within two months, the Commission may refer the matter to the European Court of Justice," the European Commission said in a statement on Thursday.

EU countries were obliged to introduce an updated version of the bloc's anti-moneylaundering rules by December last year.

The warnings were sent to Belgium, the Czech Republic, Germany, Greece, Spain, Finland, France, Ireland, Luxembourg, Malta, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Sweden and Slovakia.

The rules apply to the financial sector, lawyers, notaries, accountants, real estate agents, casinos, trusts and company service providers.

The scope also extends to all providers of goods when payments are made in cash over 15,000 euros ($23,140).

Under the rules, a company would have to identify and verify who they are dealing with, report suspicions of moneylaundering or terrorist financing to the public authorities, and ensure personnel are properly trained.



http://www.finance.cz/zpravy/finance/171673-update-1-eu-targets-15-states-over-moneylaundering-rules/
on Thursday, May 3, 2012
by Wendy Braanker*

03-06-2008
In its report "Combating money laundering and terrorist financing", the
Dutch audit office says the Netherlands is doing too little to clamp down on money laundering and cut off the supply of funds to terrorists.

It concludes that the chances of such practices being detected and punished are small. The reason is a lack of capacity and in some cases also expertise, not to mention the inadequate exchange of information among investigating agencies and supervisory bodies concerned.

The audit office draws tough conclusions: terrorist financing isn't being tackled adequately, and the results of efforts to combat money laundering are disappointing. The report is strikes a pessimistic note. "Despite government measures, laundering and the terrorist financing are not being adequately prevented, the chances of detection and punishment are small, and too little use is made of the possibility to confiscate criminal funds."

Worldwide
This is not only a problem faced by the Netherlands. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has previously estimated that on a worldwide scale, each year between two and five percent of the total flow of money is laundered.

According to a study commissioned by the Dutch Finance Ministry, the figure for the Netherlands falls at the top end of this margin. The ministry puts the Dutch figure at around five percent of the national income (the total output of goods and services plus exports, minus imports).

This is no less than 18.5 billion euros a year for the Netherlands alone. The public prosecutor's office has not investigated the reliability of this estimate, but it does conclude that the problem is immense.

Lack of leadership
The audit office blames the foreign, finance and justice ministers for providing insufficient direction: "The ministers responsible should take on a clearer leadership role." The report concludes that hardly any targets are set for organisations involved in combating money laundering and terrorist financing. For example, the office says agreements should be made with investigating agencies on the number of cases they are expected to uncover.

Tough criticism
The three ministers concerned are none too pleased with the audit office's tough criticism. They dispute the conclusion that efforts to combat money laundering achieve few results, claiming it is based on the wrong criteria.

But the ministries have also made commitments. They say the capacity of the police, the tax service's investigative department (FIOD-ECD) and the public prosecutor's office are to be increased. The development of financial expertise in the police force is one of the priorities.

Combine expertise
The audit office puts forward not only criticism but also possible solutions. For example, the report says it may be valuable to pool existing knowledge in the field. "Combine expertise on the different forms of financial and economic criminal activity, and make this an explicit task of the Financial Expertise Centre," the report recommends. This centre is a collaboration between the national security service (AIVD), the Authority for the Financial Markets (AFM), the tax service, the Dutch central bank, the National police services agency (KLPD) and the public prosecutor's office (OM).

The good news is that there is to be considerably more financial elbowroom for the investigating agencies. The report shows that in the coming years the government will be investing a lot more money in the "Security starts with prevention" programme.

Source: Radionetherlands
on Tuesday, February 21, 2012
This article, “Banks and Money Laundering”, exposes the conscious complicity of our banks in the unpatriotic and economically destructive and possibly criminal involvement in money laundering. My recent article “Banks and Fraud Incorporated” and this piece clearly confirm that the Central Bank (CBN) leadership were merely slumbering spectators rather than committed regulators and supervisors of the banking sector; a Deputy Governor of CBN, Tunde Lemo, confirmed at a media brief in 2005 that banks’ financial statements were bogus, but regrettably, no bank till date was identified for sanction or prosecution!

This article established a strong link between banks and money laundering, and we wonder whether or not the former CBN Governor deliberately lied to us when he consistently boasted that the banks were solid as ever and could in the worst case scenario rescue the economy!

It seems paradoxical that less than a year down the road, the CBN is now rescuing five banks with N420bn of tax payer’s money! This piece “Banks and Money Laundering” was first published in September 2005. Please read on:

The media was literally inundated with the allegation of financial impropriety against the Governor of Bayelsa State last week. Specially, the news revolved around the allegation that the Governor had an accumulated sum of about £20 million from several bank accounts in the United Kingdom. In addition, the Metropolitan Police in London was alleged to have found the cash sum of about £1 million in the private residence of the Governor in a classy London suburb where property values usually exceeded seven digits in pound sterling. In the event that no charge has been formally brought against the Governor pending the conclusion of police investigations, it may not be appropriate to begin to pass judgment on the violation of any criminal or ethical codes by the currently beleaguered Governor who has nonetheless been restrained to London until a date in November, in spite of the diplomatic immunity he would normally enjoy as an accredited public servant of his country. The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), which was established by the present administration as its arrowhead in its uphill battle against corruption in the body polity has already indicated that the current development is just the tip of the iceberg, and has promised that more giants will fall! This is read to mean that the identities of leading Nigerian who have siphoned huge sums of public funds into overseas accounts will be revealed and appropriate criminal action will be taken against them.

The underlying question which remains to be answered from the above scenario is how did such ‘eminent’ Nigerians move their loot from our shores to supposedly safe havens abroad? The amounts involved are so mindboggling that it is unlikely that the money was first accumulated and transported abroad through our borders in suitcases or other such packaging; the security element would also have made piecemeal transfers through different human carriers highly unlikely.

In any event, either of the above modes of transfer must imply the ready availability of large caches of foreign currencies in various bureaux de change and private vaults locally. However, the agitation to consolidate a modest amount of less than $10,000 in one go at the regular bureau de change transactions is an indication that huge sums of over $100,000 and above may not be readily sourced from your corner street bureau de change or malams! On the other hand, consolidation of sums as high as £1 million from a collection of small holdings of bureaus de change all over the country may not also be practical as this will be cumbersome and untidy and indeed, the risk of purchasing fake currencies would be a major deterrent, not to talk of the security risk involved in huge multiplicity of such foreign exchange deals.

Treasury looters who wish to dry-clean their billion naira loots would be more circumspect and would naturally prefer safer and well tested channels for converting their naira holdings into foreign exchange before transfer abroad. Indeed, the ideal medium would be one that would not only make the conversion but could also make the remittances abroad under the cover of a legitimate transaction. The only facility with such distinct advantages and possibilities is the formal financial and banking system. The Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN is naturally aware of the existence of collaboration between the banks and treasury looters and they have indeed lamented the dangers posed to the Nigerian economy by banks which engage in round tripping; that is, the purchase of dollars from the official Dutch Auction market and subsequently selling same to bidders in the black market at a high premium.

The wider the gap between the black market and the official rates of exchange, the greater the motivation of banks to indulge in this somewhat ‘free for few’ market. In spite of CBN’s awareness of the vast extent of this scam and the dangers posed to the economy, no one has so far been indicted or jailed for such crime in Nigeria. The worst punishment meted to offending banks has been a mere term suspension from the lucrative official foreign exchange market! In the light of this, most banks have thrived on profits made from the DAS. Indeed, it has been widely reported in the media that 80% of all banks’ profits are derived from government induced investments; that is, the erstwhile equally lucrative treasury bill market and the continuously lucrative foreign exchange and bonds markets.

As it is, the banks are eminently suitable for the dry-cleaning as they possess the vital qualifications to facilitate the transaction; that is, they have a ready source of foreign exchange through their participation in DAS and they also have the structure to make the remittances without necessarily moving physical cash sums from our shores abroad.

The structure of the current foreign exchange dispensation ensures that foreign currency purchases made by each bank twice weekly at DAS must be credited by the CBN into the accounts of the foreign correspondent banks and as such, funds can be disbursed for both CBN valid and non-valid transactions. Recipients of the foreign currency values of such non-valid transactions may own personal or corporate accounts for disbursement of the funds, while others may purchase property or investments in the host country; while some may decide to sell the same currencies to importers of smuggled goods who would pay a black market naira equivalent into the local Nigerian bank accounts of the seller of the foreign exchange; this would then be a classic case of round tripping!

The round tripping phenomenon remains the underbelly of the Dutch Auction System of naira exchange rate determination. Round tripping continues to thrive in view of CBN’s half-hearted attempts to curb the excesses of the foreign exchange market. The recent CBN special auction of $800m to supplement the rate of regular bi-weekly auction of dollars at DAS has ensured that the gap between the black market rate and the official market rates has widened to about N17/$1. The circumstances surrounding the irregular auction of $800 million is not very clear; what is clear, however, is the laxity which attended the auction, as participating banks seemed to have been allowed access to the auction without a clear definition of the purpose for which the banks were buying the $800 million; or how else would we explain the subsequent CBN admonition that banks should be puritanical enough to return the surplus dollars which they may have purchased in the first instance, but could not utilize! What a farce! I will bet my last kobo that no bank heeded this call!

So, if the authorities are serious about reducing the scourge of money laundering, it would make sense to carry out a backward investigation when treasury looters are discovered with huge forex balances abroad. It should not be too difficult to trace how such huge foreign exchange values got into private or so called corporate accounts of these public figures abroad. It would not require a clairvoyant to point the way to the host of Nigerian commercial banks who aid and abet the looting of our public treasury to satisfy the personal greed of the so called big men who own the majority of our banks!

Needless to say, the current Dutch Auction System supports round tripping and sustains the looting of the public treasury. The Mega Auction System proposed by the CBN to replace the DAS early next year will only succeed in consolidating the immoral gains from the forex market in the hands of a smaller elite cartel; what one might ascribe as one step forward and two steps backward movement in an environment where the CBN is aware that banks maintain three sets of trading results and yet no bank has so far been criminally indicted. Up CBN!

For the majority of Nigerians who now live on less than $1 a day, banks are those architectural masterpieces which dwarf other less elegant and sometimes conservative and decrepit structures on major highroads all over the country. A visit to a bank is as auspicious, intimidating and unlikely as a stopover for lunch in Aso Rock by any one from the critical mass of impoverished Nigerians.

Banks are seen as where ‘rich people’ keep their money and the majority of our countrymen would feel uncomfortably out of place, as fish out of water, in the ‘arctic chilled’ ambience with the searching human and electronic eyes of most banking halls.

However, for a small subsection of Nigerians with an average annual income of about N600,000, bank patronage is a futile psychological desire to aspire to an ‘elite class’ who carry cheques and savings pass books to show that they belong, even if, their accounts show nil balances less than 24 hours after lodgment of their monthly salaries! The reality of course is that most income earners outside, the buoyant sectors of banking, oil and telecom cannot afford the luxury of savings!

Meanwhile, the underlying prerequisite for investment growth in any economy is the availability of savings; without a surplus for savings from income earners, bank lending to investors will be highly constrained, and employment possibilities will become endangered.

In the event that the Banking, Telecom and Oil industries employ a very small percentage of our labour force, it is clear that the banks cannot depend on this small catchment for their impressive profitability in recent years! An associate of mine, with over thirty years professional accounting experience insists that the actual target segment for savings is the small but powerful club of public treasury looters! He maintains that only this group of ‘celebrated’ Nigerians have huge surplus funds, consequently ‘mini’ clad damsels with extra curricula skills and qualifications have become favoured bank employees to divert the course of the looted funds from Ghana must go bags into the safe havens of bank vaults! The impact of such a banking strategy on the moral fibre of our women folk has been the subject of national debate and recently, no less a body than the National Assembly has been rightly worried by this trend.

Apart from the rabid appetite for young female flesh, the critical demand of treasury looters is of course confidentiality and the ability of the recipient banks to repackage the bloated loot to give it the air of a legitimate cash lodgment; the rate of interest paid by the bank on such deposits is generally not a critical factor for the unlikely band of noveau riche. It also makes no difference that the bank will turn round and offer the same funds to desperate investors at over 5 times the rate paid by these custodians of stolen funds.

I am not a legal expert, but I know that universally, criminal law recognizes that the receiver of stolen goods (knowingly or unknowingly) is as guilty as the actual thief! Alas! Inspite of the public awareness that banks have remained veritable fences for looted public funds, our Central Bank’s sanctions have never been more than a mere slap on the wrist for a handful of indicted errant banks! In this event, it is unlikely that Nigerian banks would ever be weaned of the appetite for criminal financial collaboration against the rest of us.

The banking consolidation was feted as the hope bearer for better banking services and the potential engine of growth for the economy, particularly the small and medium industrial sub sector. However, over a year after the completion of the exercise, most of the corresponding positive expectations remain unfulfilled; banking halls continue to witness long unending queues of customers, simple cash withdrawals can still take hours to transact; the consolidation exercise has also reduced the disposable income in the system with serious consequences for consumer industries and general employment. The consolidation exercise inevitably led to staff rationalization and very many otherwise secure Nigerians suddenly lost their jobs without adequate preparation for alternative gainful employment. Meanwhile, the jumbo salary packages of bank employees created a serious fracture in the national wage structure, such that a driver in a bank would receive a bigger salary than a graduate medical doctor in any of our government hospitals! Banking remains the prime destination for almost every job seeker in spite of the increasing rate of fraud in the system.

The Guardian Newspapers on page 6 of the edition of Friday 28/12/2007 carried a report titled “EFCC FINGERS 10 BANKS IN LOOTING BY EX GOVERNORS”. The report noted that.. “Not less than 10 banks have been linked with illegal transfer of public funds abroad by some former Governors under investigation or trial by the EFCC”

The Guardian report added that “most of the huge funds being recovered by the EFCC from the former State Executives were transferred out of the country through some officials of the banks”.

Incidentally, these nefarious activities of our wonder banks were not brought to the attention of the EFCC by the traditional watchdog of the banking system, i.e. the Central Bank of Nigeria, in spite of its self adulation of excellent banking supervision, audit and control! “Indeed the Guardian report under reference indicated that “the EFCC unearthed the various roles played by the banks in the course of quizzing former Governors.” Nigerians have been led to look elsewhere all along by the CBN as if the miscreant Governors and other treasury looters had carted their loot to Mallams in Martins Street for changing to Dollars before stuffing the Dollar loads into bags and suitcases and physically smuggling their booty through any of our porous borders! Na lie!

The banks were the main conduits for treasury looters and they continue to play this role as you read this article! As you can imagine, billions of Naira will be readily provided by the cabal to defend this criminality and Nigerians should not be surprised at the legal jargons, technicalities and illogical summersaults in the coming months to throw the EFCC off the tracks of those wild hounds who are resolved to have the rest of us for regular dinner!

The EFCC should be encouraged by civil society and the National Assembly to also investigate the apparently incestuous relationship between the CBN and the commercial banks. The CBN should explain why it has dished out over $7bn to these commercial banks at concessionary rates, while we seek foreign loans at cut throat rates! Or why the same CBN and the Debt Management Office continue to borrow money at expensive rates when we have huge idle cash surplus.

The EFCC should also investigate the involvement of members of the government’s economic policy team and determine their involvement in the ownership of bank equity after the consolidation exercise. Some critics maintain that only the hope of personal gain could make these public officers not only to consciously featherbed the banks through government policy but also turn blind eyes to the current criminality in our banking system. In responsible societies, the crime of insider trading has earned many erstwhile illustrious entrepreneurs long term jail sentences.”

Source: Saharareporters , Written by Les Leba
on Friday, February 3, 2012


This report provides a summary of the anti-money laundering (AML) and combating the financing of terrorism (CFT) measures in place in Aruba, the Kingdom of the Netherlands at December 2008 (the date of the on-site visit) and immediately thereafter. It describes and analyses those measures and provides recommendations on how certain aspects of the system could be strengthened. It also sets out Aruba’s level of compliance with the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) 40+9 Recommendations (see the table Ratings of Compliance with the FATF Recommendations).
Key Findings

The level of criminality in Aruba is generally not high, but has increased considerably over the last 10 years. Due to its geographical location and travel facilities, money laundering is primarily linked to drug trafficking and risks have been identified for cross border movement of cash, in the real estate and jewellery sectors and through misuse of exempt companies. Terrorist financing has not been seen as a major risk to date.
Aruba’s economic system is currently largely based on tourism and oil refining; but the island has actively sought to diversify its economy, in particular by developing its off-shore activities, through the licensing of offshore banks, though in a limited number, and the development of offshore companies. However, the measures in company and other laws to ensure the transparency and integrity of these vehicles are inadequate. The introduction in February 2009 of the State Ordinance Supervision Trust Company Services Providers is aimed at regulating trust and company service providers, and this will help. However, there is still a significant weakness, as TCSPs are still not subject to basic AML/CFT requirements. Aruban corporate vehicles represent a substantial risk for misuse by launderers and other criminals, and rapid and significant progress is required.

Aruba enhanced its ML offence in 2006, and has since taken effective prosecution action against money launderers. However, Aruba has chosen not to criminalise terrorist financing as required by SR. II, considering that terrorist financing activity can be adequately dealt with through existing provisions of the Criminal Code such as the ancillary offences of preparation or participation or complicity in a terrorist attack, or being a member of a terrorist organisation. This argument is rejected by the assessment team, and Aruba is strongly urged to urgently criminalise TF as a separate and independent offence. Similarly urgent action is needed to implement UNSCR 1267 and 1373.

In general, Aruba’s system of AML/CFT preventive measures is incomplete and lacks coherence and effectiveness. Aruba should urgently review the structure of the regime, including the legislation and dedicate more resources to the agencies in charge of AML/CFT. Aruba should also give clearly defined tasks and priorities to each of those agencies.

There are many financial activities being performed by financial institutions that are neither regulated nor supervised. These financial institutions are not subject to AML/CFT requirements, which creates potential opportunities that could be misused by money launderers and other criminals.

The basic preventive legislation for AML/CFT is set out in two state ordinances, one dealing with Customer Due Diligence requirements, and the other with the reporting obligations. However the legislative requirements have many gaps relative to the FATF standards, and this is exacerbated by a lack of clarity and consistency in the scope and the extent of the obligations. Aruba should rectify this, and should seriously consider preparing completely new and coherent legislation dealing with all the deficiencies and implement all the FATF requirements.

The AML/CFT supervision of most of the FIs is currently handled by both the MOT (Aruban FIU) and the Central Bank of Aruba (CBA), which creates overlap and an inefficient use of already limited resources. The supervision should thus be reorganised and strengthened, including the introduction of a significantly more robust enforcement culture. It is logical that the CBA should supervise all types of financial institutions for all their AML/CFT obligations as this would result in a more consistent and better organised approach to supervision. The CBA should consult with the FIU on a regular basis.

A basic system for international co-operation is in place, but Aruba should introduce a number of enhancements both at the judicial and administrative levels. Consideration should also be given to reviewing and updating the legislation.

Click to download the full report the the Mutual Evaluation of Aruba, Kingdom of the Netherlands (pdf, 2185 Kb)

Click to download the executive summary of the Mutual Evaluation of Aruba, Kingdom of the Netherlands (pdf, 341 Kb)


Source: FATF
on Sunday, December 10, 2006
7 December 2006

AMSTERDAM — The former boss of the bankrupt airline Air Holland was found guilty in Rotterdam Court on Thursday of laundering millions of euros in drugs money.

The court sentenced former chief executive Cees van D. to 18 months years in jail, of which six months were suspended.

His financial chief officer, Paul G., was sentenced to three years jail, six months of which were suspended.

After being appointed chief executive of the struggling Air Holland in 2001, Van D. realised that millions of guilders were necessary to keep the airline alive.

The judge said Van D. resorted to taking millions of guilders in criminal money. He knew the investments were of dubious origins, but didn't ask any questions.


In handing down the ruling, the court judge said Van D. had a strong self-interest in the success of Air Holland because he had invested his own fortune into the airline.

Paul G. played an important role in a criminal organisation. He was the financial brain and took millions of guilders in sport bags to London and Luxembourg.

In total, he transported NLG 60 million for a criminal organisation.

The money was then handed onto middlemen who made the money transferable. The funds were then invested in Air Holland.

Both executives expressed disappointment at their convictions. Van D. said he could not recognise himself in the picture the court had sketched of him, while Paul G. stressed that he would appeal the ruling.

http://www.expatica.com/actual/article.asp?subchannel_id=19&story_id=34919
The Associated Press
Thursday, December 7, 2006
AMSTERDAM, Netherlands

A Dutch court ruled Thursday that the former top executives of a Dutch airline sought investments from drug smugglers for their financially distressed company and sentenced them to up to three years in prison.

The Rotterdam District Court said Air Holland Chief Financial Officer Paul Gruythuysen was the financial brain behind a criminal gang that laundered as much as €35 million (US$46 million), using some of it to finance the company's loss-making operations. He was given a three-year sentence.

The airline, which flew from the Netherlands to several Caribbean destinations, went bankrupt in March 2004.

Prosecutors said Gruythuysen personally delivered large sums of cash to contacts in Europe, including a diplomat from the Dominican Republic, from whom British authorities seized €6 million ($8 million) in cash. That man, whose name was not released, received diplomatic immunity and was not prosecuted.

Another contact, identified as Ghaudanand G., was sentenced to 28 months.

Air Holland's former chief executive, Cees van Dormael, who joined the company when it was already in financial trouble in 2001, was found not to have been part of the criminal ring. But he was judged to have been aware of its existence and was jailed for 18 months.

"In his desire to attract financing, he found refuge in millions of (euros) of criminal money," the ruling said of Van Dormael.

Dutch news magazine Elsevier reported both men planned to appeal.

"I'm still convinced I didn't do anything criminal," Elsevier quoted Gruythuysen saying. "I know for myself I didn't do it. Never intentionally."

Prosecutors said a pair of brothers identified by the court as Piet G. and Iwan G. invested drug money in the scheme. Piet was sentenced to one year prison, but he already is serving five years for cocaine smuggling. Iwan is serving an eight-year sentence in Brazil for attempting to smuggle 50,000 Ecstasy pills.

http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2006/12/07/europe/EU_GEN_Netherlands_Executives_Convicted.php