Showing posts with label Singapore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Singapore. Show all posts
on Sunday, July 1, 2012
by Mary Swire, Tax-News.com, Hong Kong

During a recent speech for the Wealth Management Institute, the Managing Director of the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), Ravi Menon, said that Singapore welcomed legitimate funds from Europe, or anywhere else, seeking to be managed out of Singapore, but not illicit funds seeking shelter from scrutiny.

He considered that Singapore is seen to be the ideal base for the intermediation of that growing Asian wealth due to its political and economic stability, transparency in governance, and sound and predictable regulation, together with strong capabilities in asset management, foreign exchange and derivatives trading, coupled with deep and liquid capital markets.

However, Menon stressed that the financial sector must be kept clean.

“While cross-border crimes have become increasingly sophisticated, Singapore is vulnerable to being used as a conduit for illicit funds,” he added. “We need to guard against financial flows relating to corruption, terrorism, politically exposed persons, and weapons proliferation. More recently, efforts by various governments to strengthen tax enforcement have increased the risk of undeclared monies flowing to Singapore.”

Menon confirmed that MAS is fully committed to safeguarding the integrity and reputation of Singapore as a clean financial centre, and already has a strong legal and regulatory framework on anti-money laundering (AML) and counter financing of terrorism (CFT), in line with international standards; and a rigorous regime of supervision to monitor compliance by financial institutions.

Having reviewed Singapore’s regulations and supervisory and enforcement actions, the Financial Action Task Force assessors concluded: “Singapore’s AML/CFT sanctions regime is effective, proportionate, and dissuasive.”

Nevertheless, Singapore is now considering a tougher penalty regime for violations of AML/CFT; intends to make criminal the laundering of proceeds from tax offences to send a clear message that it neither wants nor will tolerate illicit inflows; and will step up its enforcement resources to deal with suspicious transactions reported by financial institutions.

It will also strengthen cross-border co-operation to fight trans-national financial crime, and will step up vigilance against suspicious flows of funds arising from external developments.

With regard to the latter, Menon was sceptical that Singapore is benefiting from an inflow of hot monies, “especially from Europe, supposedly following the adoption of enhanced exchange of information provisions among European Union countries,” as tales of large inflows of funds from Europe into Singapore are “vastly exaggerated.”

He pointed out that, “according to the Boston Consulting Group, European wealth is estimated at just 10% of the USD900 billion offshore assets under management in Singapore and Hong Kong. … As one banker puts it, the emergence of Singapore and Hong Kong as wealth management hubs has to do with more Asian wealth being retained in Asia rather than a flight of new funds to Asia.”

Nonetheless, he concluded that Singapore “must remain vigilant against potential negative spill-overs of illicit funds triggered by external developments. Recently, when Switzerland signed bilateral treaties with the United Kingdom and Germany on tax-related matters, MAS issued a set of guidelines as a pre-emptive step to guard against any potential inflows of illicit funds.”

MAS guidelines reminded financial institutions that they have a key role to play in preserving the integrity of our financial system, and safeguarding it from being used as a haven for illegitimate funds or as a conduit to disguise the flow of such funds. “This vigilance,” he emphasized, “should be extended to all forms of suspicious flows, be they from tax evasion or corruption.”

Source: Tax News
on Thursday, June 14, 2012
A mid-level Apple manager faces twenty-three counts of a federal grand jury indictment alleging that the 37-year-old Paul Shin Devine, a global supply manager, is guilty of wire fraud, money laundering, and kickbacks related to his position at the company. Andrew Ang, of Singapore, faces the same charges as well.

And if that's not bad enough, Apple itself has filed a separate civil suit against Devine, alleging that the Sunnyvale, CA-based (former) employee accepted more than $1 million in bribes and kickbacks from countries including China, South Korea, Taiwan, and Singapore.

According to the indictment, Devine allegedly used his position at Apple to acquire various bits of confidential information about the company. He would turn around and sell this information to more than a half-dozen Apple suppliers—including the aforementioned Ang—and both would receive payments for their efforts. Using the confidential knowledge, said suppliers would be able to better position themselves to bid for and receive Apple contracts.

The San Jose Mercury News reports that the companies in the indictment remained unnamed, but they're said to be involved in supplying materials for Apple's iPods and iPhones.

"Apple is committed to the highest ethical standards in the way we do business," said Apple spokesman Steve Dowling in a statement. "We have zero tolerance for dishonest behavior inside or outside the company."

The somewhat-complicated scheme, reads the indictment, involved a number of U.S. and foreign bank accounts, as well as the falsified company "CPK Engineering," to process the payments. Devine allegedly attempted to conceal the money transfers using code words as to not clue his employer into what was actually transpiring, and would even go so far as to open the foreign bank accounts in his wife's name.

The Internal Revenue Service reports that Devine is currently in the custody of U.S. Marshals, awaiting a 1:30 p.m. court appearance this coming Monday in the U.S. Northern District Court in San Jose.

Source: PC Mag
on Monday, June 11, 2012
It's easy to criticize the U.N. Security Council's new resolution targeting Iran. But it might prove a surprisingly effective tool in tightening the noose on the regime in Tehran.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

on Monday, June 4, 2012
Arafat Rahman Koko, the younger son of former Bangladesh prime minister Khaleda Zia, went on trial today in a graft case for allegedly laundering Tk 23 crore.

The trial of Koko, who is in Bangkok for medical treatment since July 2008, and Ismail Hossain Saimon, son of former shipping minister Akbar Hossain, began today for alleged money laundering Taka 23 crore, the Star online reported.

Koko and Saimon were indicted for money laundering on November 30 last year.

Justice Mohammad Mozammel Hossain of Special Judge''s Court-3 recorded the statement of complainant Abu Sayeed, deputy director of Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC), the report said.

Hossain had framed the charges against the duo in their absence and said the trial would continue in their absence.

The anti-graft body has accused them of siphoning off money from China Harbour Engineering Company Ltd and Siemens for helping them win government contracts.

China Harbour got a Taka 351 crore contract to set up New Mooring Container Terminal and Siemens a Taka 239 crore contract to supply and install equipment for Teletalk, the state-owned mobile phone operator.

Koko, who was arrested in September 2007, on graft charges and paroled for treatment abroad in July the following year, is now in Bangkok.

Saimon has been on the run since the Anti-corruption Commission filed the money-laundering case against him and Koko on March 17, 2009.

A Bangladeshi court yesterday rejected a petition of Tarique Rahman, Koko''s elder brother, seeking relief in a money-laundering case.

Bangladesh''s Anti-corruption Commission (ACC) on Octobe 26, 2009, filed the case with a Dhaka court against Tarique and his business partner Giasuddin Al Mamun on charges of siphoning of Taka 204.1 million to Singapore between 2003 and 2007.

Bangladesh''s Appellate Division upheld the High Court verdict rejecting a petition challenging the money-laundering case against Tarique, the bdnews24 online reported.

Tarique, the senior vice-chairman of BNP, has 14 cases filed against him on various charges. He has been undergoing treatment in the UK. PTI

Source: MSN News
on Wednesday, May 30, 2012
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
on Monday, May 28, 2012
(Reuters)

27 October 2007

SINGAPORE - Singapore will introduce new measures in November to try to detect money laundering and terrorism financing, the city-state’s police said.

From Nov. 1, anyone carrying or posting cash or negotiable instruments of more than S$30,000 (US$20,650) or the equivalent in foreign currency, in or out of Singapore, will have to submit a report to immigration authorities, police said.

‘This measure is intended to detect and monitor the movements of currency or bearer negotiable instruments by cash couriers supporting terrorism financing or money laundering activities,’ police said in a statement late on Friday.

‘It is not a currency control measure,’ it added.

Tharman Shanmugaratnam, a deputy finance minister, said in September that Singapore planned to raise the maximum fine for money laundering and terrorism financing 10-fold to S$1 million.

The tiny but wealthy Southeast Asian country, which is trying to become a key private banking and asset management centre in Asia, figured on a US State Department list in 2004 as a centre of ‘primary concern’ for money laundering.

Money laundering is the processing of cash or other property derived from criminal activity to disguise its illegal origin.

Singapore is the fifth-biggest currency trading centre in the world and the second biggest in Asia after Tokyo, according to the Bank of International Settlements.

It accounts for 5.8 percent of global currency turnover, with an average daily turnover of $231 billion, BIS said last month. It is the biggest trading centre for emerging market currencies in the world.


http://www.khaleejtimes.com/DisplayArticleNew.asp?xfile=data/business/2007/October/business_October637.xml§ion=business&col=
on Sunday, May 27, 2012
A Jersey lawyer specialising in the field of money laundering and financial services regulation has questioned the validity of the European Union's 'white list' of countries whose money-laundering controls are considered to be equal to those of EU member states, and which notably excludes leading offshore fund jurisdictions in Europe and the Caribbean.

Stephen Platt, an English barrister and chairman of BakerPlatt Group, queries the inclusion on the list of countries such as Russia, Argentina and Mexico, as well Australia and Canada, which have been adjudged to be less than 25 per cent compliant with the international standards established by the Financial Action Task Force.

Platt describes as "bewildering" the suggestion that the white list countries have higher standards of anti-money laundering controls than leading offshore financial services jurisdictions including the UK's Crown Dependencies.

"Having researched the background to some of the countries included, we question why countries that fall behind recognised international standards are on the list, while finance centres such as Jersey, the Bahamas and the Cayman Islands are not," says Platt, who advises governments and regulators on the implementation of regulatory and anti-money laundering rules.

An analysis by BakerPlatt and its alliance partner in London, Seven Bedford Row, notes that the first mutual evaluation report on Russia in 2001 by the European Committee on Crime Problems noted as a "critical deficiency" the country's lack of comprehensive laws and regulations implementing international standards on money laundering.

Although a second evaluation in 2004 noted significant improvements, it also found that numbers of investigations, prosecutions and convictions for money laundering were falling and know your customer procedures remained deficient.

A report on Argentina by Gafisud, a regional FATF offshoot for South America, noted inherent weaknesses in legislation that had the effect of impeding successful prosecution of money laundering, while no offence of terrorist financing existed. The country was criticised for its failure to provide statistics in anti-money laundering areas, preventing an assessment of the implementation of core requirements from being carried out.

The FATF's September 2004 report described the application of anti money laundering measures in Mexico as somewhat haphazard, and said the lack of mutual legal assistance legislation not only inhibited the country's ability to co-operate internationally, it also undermined national prosecutions. Bank and trust secrecy was also criticised as impeding investigations.

In addition, the lawyers say, while the FATF praised South Africa for developing a legislative structure to combat money laundering, the absence of a framework to combat the financing of terrorism was noted, whilst the framework in place was so new it needed time to be assessed for its effectiveness.

BakerPlatt notes that Jersey, which was not included on the white list, was assessed as 76 per cent compliant at the time of the island's last assessment by the International Monetary Fund in 2003. The most recent FATF assessments, issued in November last year, rated the Bahamas as 45 per cent compliant and Cayman as 78 per cent compliant.

However, five of the 13 countries on the list were far below this level, according to their most recent IMF assessments: Australia (24 per cent), Canada (14 per cent), Singapore (23 per cent), Switzerland (22 per cent) and the US (31 per cent).

"Australia's and Canada's staggering level of non-compliance with FATF recommendations makes it difficult for the EU to justify their inclusion on the white list on the grounds of 'equivalence'," Platt says.

"Given that the EU recently announced that it is to pursue infringement measures against 15 of its member states for failing to implement the Third Money Laundering Directive into national law, it would perhaps be better placed to give a jurisdiction such as Jersey the recognition it deserves, and the role model some of its member states appear to need, as the leader in the field of anti-money laundering."

Source: HedgeWeek
on Monday, May 21, 2012
29 Sep 2007, 0058 hrs IST,Pradeep Thakur,TNN

NEW DELHI: The Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU) has forwarded a list of suspicious transactions, including hundreds of cases of suspected terror financing and doubtful foreign remittances, to Intelligence Bureau and other investigating agencies.

In its first annual report released recently, the FIU identified several accounts having a common beneficiary with huge and unexplained money transfers made to them.

Tasked to keep an eye on money laundering and combating terror financing, the FIU report said many of these foreign remittances were doubtful with scant information on the source of funds and actual beneficiaries. Some such account holders were even found to be on the Interpol's watch list and were known criminals.

These suspicious transactions included "cash deposits in bank accounts at multiple locations, off-market transactions in demat accounts, fraudulent use of ATM and credit cards and unexplained activity in accounts inconsistent with what would be expected from declared business."

Banks reported the highest number (437) of suspicious transactions in the last one year while financial institutions and intermediaries accounted for 380 such reports up to March 2007.

The ease with which terrorists and their fronts have laundered money in India through formal channels of transaction raises serious doubts on the efficacy of the strict due diligence regimen imposed by the government on banks and financial institutions a few years ago.

With reports of terror outfits gaining access to stock and commodity markets and evolving ways to evade checks put in place to scan their transactions, it seems money launderers and terrorists have perfected some device to go under the radar of the due diligence mechanism.

In light of the IPO scam, the government had begun harsh punitive action and barred some multinational banks from expanding in India and opening new branches. The punitive measures included sacking dozens of employees of at least two banks. But it seems these measures had only a momentary effect.

The FIU report said India received at least 14 enquiries from abroad related to terror financing and other suspicious transactions. In two cases, some countries, including the US, Canada, Russia and Germany, assisted India in disseminating information.

FIU officials were also sent to the US, Australia, Canada and Thailand to train with the anti-money laundering mechanism put in place by these countries. In the last one year, FIU officials also attended nine joint-working groups on counter-terrorism with the US, Germany, China, Russia, Italy, Canada, Singapore and Israel.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/India_warned_of_dubious_transactions/articleshow/2412984.cms
Sri Lanka: International Conference on Countering Terrorism draws international terrorism experts to Colombo

20th October 2007

The three-day International Conference on Countering Terrorism is now on in Colombo on the theme 'Terrorism: A Challenge to Democratically Elected Governments.' The Conference, brought together renowned terrorism experts, including from the academia and the media, from 23 countries including Australia, China, Czech Republic, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Russia, Singapore, South Africa, the United States and Vietnam. It was also widely attended by the Diplomatic Community .

Delivering the Inaugural Address, Foreign Minister Rohitha Bogollagama, highlighted that "Sri Lanka had been a foot soldier in the battle against terrorism over a long period of time and notwithstanding some impediments and setbacks, can in several aspects count itself as having been a success story in the battle against terrorism." Sri Lanka's refusal to compromise or condone terrorism while constantly seeking to resolve the conflict through political means, to persuade other states to proscribe the LTTE, prevent money flows and apprehend those conniving with terrorists, has been significant. Successive governments and the people of Sri Lanka have also shown considerable resilience in the face of terror, whilst also ensuring that economic growth was not compromised. The Minister hoped that the deliberations of this Conference would, among other matters focus on the need for states to go beyond merely adopting conventions, to convert these into tangible action by developing enabling legislation and taking concrete action against those including terrorist front organizations operating from their soil. Noting that a bulk of maritime traffic passes through the Indian Ocean region and that in recent times many acts of terrorism had taken place in these waters, the Minister emphasized the urgent necessity to develop robust modalities to arrest the growing threat that faces Indian Ocean states from terrorists.

The former Director of the European Center for the Study of Conflicts in France, and one of the earliest writers in the field of terrorism, Dr. Gerard Chaliand traced the evolution of terrorism over the years. Referring to the LTTE, he said "the independence they ask cannot be granted and should not be granted, not only because no State is willing to accept such a blow to its sovereignity but also because, like the Shining Path or the Khmer Rouges, the LTTE under the leadership of V. Prabhakaran is a totalitarian movement, which has transformed its groups into a killing machine." He said "the most important thing about the LTTE is that it is a totalitarian movement fighting in a country which is democratic." He said the "LTTE has brutally eliminated all other parties or groups willing to represent the Tamils". "An absolutely intolerant sect, no peace seems possible with V. Prabhakaran as we have seen from the peace process of 2002-2005, which was but a tactical truce", Dr. Chaliand added.

Secretary of Foreign Affairs, Dr. Palitha Kohona delivering the vote-of-thanks repeated the unprecedented challenge Sri Lanka faces in combating terrorism and Sri Lanka. He said the world had focused on international terrorism only after 9/11 but terrorism had affected countries long before then. He emphasized that "the international rule of law against terrorism is being strong themed each year," adding that "there are 13 UN Conventions addressing different dimensions of the global terrorist threat and a comprehensive convention is being negotiated." The Foreign Secretary pointed out that "terrorism will never be eradicated solely by cooperation among law enforcement officials. It requires a concerted political effort and policy coordination among countries. Further it also requires an ability to understand and minimize the motivation and impetus that inspire terrorist acts."

Renowned Chairman of the French Anti-Terrorist Judges, Judge Jean Louis Bruguiere, who was the Guest of Honour of the Conference, and addressing the first panel of the day focused on the international responses to terrorism, traced the manner in which international efforts at responding to terrorism have evolved over the years, stating that if the fight against terrorism is an inescapable requirement, "we owe it to ourselves to reinforce our international cooperation at every level, notably by adopting multilateral or bilateral conventions in the field of judicial cooperation as well as extradition." He said the French Government considers "that an organization like the LTTE is a terrorist organization like any other and that its activities even in the area of logistics, have to be repressed with the same vigour as for terrorist networks operating on our [French] soil and threatening us directly" and that on this basis "that in April this year the French Government had dismantled a vast network of Tamil militants who actively supported the LTTE, notably at the financial level."

This session, which was chaired by the Dean of the Faculty of Arts of the University of Colombo, Prof. Amal Jayawardena,while the discussants were the Executive Director of the Regional Centre for Strategic Studies, Dr. Rifaat Hussain and the Senior Terrorism Prevention Officer of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, Vienna, Dr. Ms. Irka Kuleshnyk.

Addressing the panel on regional responses to terrorism, former Commander of the Indian Army, Gen. V. P. Malik emphasized the need to combat and defeat terrorism in all its manifestations. He said "terrorist activities anywhere will stop only when their fuel runs out." Gen. Malik who traced the important steps taken to counter terrorism in South Asia, emphasized the need for a regional strategy and cooperation, but essentially local operatives and doctrines.

Former Secretary General of SAARC, Ambassador Nihal Rodrigo, chaired this session, while the discussants comprised the Associate Research Fellow of the China Institute of International Studies, Prof. Zhang Lijun, the Deputy Director of the Russian Foreign Ministry, Mr. Vladimir Titokerni as well as the Pro-Chancellor and Director of the School of Science and Forensic Science, National Law University Rajastan, India, Prof. P. Chandra Sekharan.

The third thematic session focused on the domestic dimensions of terrorism where the head of the International Centre for Political Violence and Terrorism Research in Singapore, Dr. Rohan Gunaratna, who was the principal speaker, who joining the deliberations on a video link, highlighted the recent successes of the security forces in combating LTTE terrorism. He noted that within the year the Sri Lanka Navy destroyed eight merchant vessels. In order to defeat the LTTE, Dr. Gunaratna articulated the need for strengthening and building capacity in the intelligence field, with a high degree of professionalism, and also stressed the necessity for special forces and elite units that could target the leadership of the LTTE.

Former Inspector General of Police, Mr. Chandra Fernando chaired the discussion at which intervention were made by Deputy Solicitor General, Mr. Dappula de Livera and Prof. Karunaratne Hangawatte of the University of Nevada.

The final panel discussion of the day focused of the critical area of combating terrorist financing, where the Founder and CEO of World-Check, Mr. David Leppan spoke extensively on the manner in which terror groups collect funds and their illegal activities.

Researcher of the Centre for Policing, Intelligence and Counter Terrorism of the Macquarie University of Australia, Mr. Shanaka Jayasekera the co-speaker at this session noted that the LTTE's supply chain capability has been significantly disrupted, estimated at between 65% to 70%. This would result in the need for the LTTE to aggressively campaign for fund raising activities in the 12 top level resource mobilization countries. In order to maintain the advantage the Government has achieved, it is imperative that the fund-raising be curbed with international cooperation in the next few months. Therefore it is suggested that a contact group be established as a prelude to the commencement of a political process."

The Deputy Governor of the Central Bank, Dr. Ms. Ranee Jayamaha chaired the sessions, at which the discussants were Mrs. Joan De Zilva Moonesinghe formerly of the Financial Investigation Unit and the Advisor of the Financial Investigation Unit of the Central Bank, Mr. Eric Stonecipher.

Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Colombo

20 October 2007
on Saturday, May 19, 2012
The Ministry of Justice (MOJ) aims at criminalizing unexplained wealth for government officials, Vice Justice Minister Huang Shih-ming said yesterday.

The statement came less than a week after an investigation was launched into money laundering claims apparently implicating former president Chen Shui-bian and his family, following similar moves by Swiss authorities.

Speaking at a news conference, Huang drew on similar laws existing abroad to explain that Taiwan aims at better monitoring illicit flows of money and combat money laundering.

As Chen and his wife Wu Shu-jen deposited large sums of cash abroad under the names of their family members, he stressed that the MOJ will seek to broaden cross-border judicial cooperation with foreign governments in Switzerland, Singapore and the United States.

In the meantime, Huang said the MOJ offers a NT$10 million reward to anyone providing information leading to a break in the case over the latest money-laundering allegations against the former first family.

The MOJ also urges companies, organizations or individuals who were involved in the alleged money laundering operations to take a moral stance and come forward to help solve the case.

During a questioning at her residence last week, the former first lady told prosecutors that the US$21 million remitted in the family's various overseas bank accounts was "all legal income."

The hefty sum was reportedly rifled into three bank accounts: two in Switzerland held in the names of her daughter-in-law Huang Jui-ching and one in Singapore under the name of her brother Wu Ching-mao.

In November 2006, Chen's wife was first charged with corruption and forgery for using receipts provided by others to claim reimbursements totaling NT$14.8 million from the president's "state affairs fund" between July 2002 and March 2006.

Chen, who was named as a co-defendant in the same case but enjoyed immunity from prosecution while he was in office, came under questioning shortly after he stepped down from the presidency May 20.

After he admitted Aug. 14 that he lied about his campaign expenses for his two mayoral elections and two presidential elections, and that his wife had transferred surplus campaign contributions to overseas bank accounts, prosecutors imposed an overseas travel ban on him.

Prosecutor Ching Chi-jen left for Switzerland Aug. 15 to review the accounts under the name of Chen's daughter-in-law at Merrill Lynch Bank after the Federal Department of Justice and Police of the Swiss Confederation requested assistance from Taiwan in a case of suspected money laundering by Chen's son and his daughter-in-law, through two Swiss bank accounts.

The prosecutors also searched Chen and Wu's home over the weekend.

Source: China Post
The alleged involvement of former President Chen Shui-bian in massive overseas money laundering drove down the share prices of some major financial stocks by 7%, the daily maximum limit, yesterday (Aug. 18), due to the rumor alleging that Chen received huge bribes from them during the second financial reform.

The most noticeable case is Taishin Financial Holding, whose share price closed at NT$10.05 yesterday, barely higher than the par value of NT$10, a record low, overshadowing the company`s plan to raise fresh fund via cash capital increment by issuing 450 million new shares in December.

To cope with the crisis, Taishin runs advertisements on all major local newspapers today, categorically denying involvement in any irregular activities and vowing to take legal moves against those who spread rumors against the company, so as to uphold the interests of its shareholders and its affiliate Chang Hwa Commercial Bank.

Lin Keh Hsiao, Taishin president, denied yesterday giving Chen NT$2.7 billion to facilitate the takeover of Chang Hwa Bank in 2005, in refuting the statement of Shih Min-teh, former chairman of Democratic Progress Party that "a domestic enterprise gave Chen NT$2.7 billion."

Lin noted that Taishin obtained 400 million shares of Chang Hwa in 2005 at NT$26.12 per share, totaling NT$$36.5 billion, NT$11.4 billion higher than the floor price and NT$7 billion higher than the second highest bid tendered by Taemasek of Singapore.

The participation of Taishin has helped vitalize Chang Hwa`s operation, including write-off of NT$70 billion bad debt, increase of return on equity (ROE), and increase in the latter`s share price, according to Lin.

Despite its huge spending, Taishin has yet to complete the merger with Chang Hwa, which, plus the impact of the twin-card debt storm, has driven down its share price from the level of NT$27.65 on July 22, 2005, when it won the bidding for Chang Hwa shares.

(by Philip Liu)

Source: CENS
Stewart Bell, National Post

A Toronto non-profit group wired more than $3-million to overseas bank accounts, some of them linked to the Tamil Tigers, before it was shut down by the government in June for alleged terrorist financing, says an RCMP report released yesterday.

The report, marked "Secret" but unsealed by order of a Federal Court judge, provides the first detailed look at the banking activities of the World Tamil Movement (WTM), a Toronto-based group accused of bankrolling Sri Lanka's Tamil Tigers guerrillas.

Most of the money, $1.9-million, went to an account at the Bumiputra Commerce Bank in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, that the RCMP report says "is utilized as a vehicle to forward money to the LTTE [Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam] from Canada."

The 83-page financial report is the fruit of two years of analysis of banking records seized by Canadian anti-terrorism police who are investigating a financial network run by supporters of the Tamil Tigers that allegedly raised money in Canada to buy arms for the guerrillas.

"The bank records seized ... demonstrate that the World Tamil Movement has developed an elaborate machine like entity that moves throughout the Greater Toronto Area collecting funds with extreme proficiency," the police report says.

Stockwell Day, the Public Safety Minister, announced on June 16 that his government had added the WTM to Ottawa's official list of terrorist groups, alongside the likes of Al-Qaeda, Hamas and Hezbollah. The WTM is the first Canadian community group to be listed.

The WTM has denied any involvement in terrorist fundraising and vowed to challenge the government's decision, and at a large outdoor rally in Toronto on July 5, Tamils waved Tamil Tigers flags and endorsed a statement condemning Ottawa's decision to ban the WTM.

The Minister has accused the WTM of transferring money to LTTE bank accounts in Sri Lanka, but the RCMP's Feb. 1, 2008, financial report paints a more detailed picture of a complex network made up of 20 Canadian bank accounts.

Five banks held the accounts: Toronto Dominion, Bank of Nova Scotia, Royal Bank, CIBC and the National Bank of Canada. The Canadian account holders wired money regularly to accounts in Malaysia, Singapore, the United Kingdom and Tamil Tigers-controlled areas of Sri Lanka.

RCMP Corporal Deanna Hill, the author of the police report, wrote that the WTM's financial set-up was "congruent with the money laundering techniques often employed by organized crime groups.

"I also believe that the number of accounts alone demonstrate that the World Tamil Movement has utilized the Canadian banking system to raise funds in a manner that is best suited to financing the terrorist activities of the LTTE."

The Tamil Tigers have been fighting for 25 years for an independent homeland for Sri Lanka's ethnic Tamil minority, which has faced discrimination under the island's Sinhalese majority.

In addition to fighting a conventional guerrilla war, however, the Tigers also employ terrorist tactics, such as suicide bombings and political assassinations, which has landed them on international terrorist lists, Canada's included.

The RCMP began investigating the Tamil Tigers' Canadian fundraising network in 2002, focusing on the WTM's large head office in Toronto and its smaller branch offices in Montreal and Vancouver. Police raided the Toronto and Montreal offices in 2006.

Police seized letters from the Tamil Tigers leadership thanking Canada for its donations, explaining how the money had been used to purchase weapons, and asking for more. But much of the police evidence appears to have come from a study of bank accounts held by the WTM and its officers.

The Project Osaluki financial report claims the WTM's most lucrative fundraising method was a pre-authorized payment program, in which the group persuaded hundreds of its supporters to sign forms allowing money to be withdrawn from their bank accounts each month.

The WTM took in up to $763,000 a year using the payment scheme. On a single day in 2005, the WTM withdrew $63,528 from 1,582 bank accounts. "It is obvious from the amounts collected with this method that the pre-authorized payment scheme is effective, timely and spares valued resources," says the RCMP report.

Most of the forms had been signed in Canada but police also interviewed witnesses who said they had signed them at Tamil Tigers checkpoints in Sri Lanka. "Upon their return to Canada, these persons were visited by representatives of the World Tamil Movement to exact the collection of the monthly stipend," Cpl. Hill wrote.

In addition, the WTM made money through bake sales, car washes, newspaper sales, merchandise sales and festivals, the report says. "To date, the total amount of Canadian dollars that have been forwarded to accounts internationally from accounts controlled by the World Tamil Movement in Canada is $3,101,803.33."

Source: National Post
on Friday, May 18, 2012
Author : DPA

Taiwan on Monday thanked Singapore for offering to help Taipei probe suspected money laundering by former president Chen Shui-bian. "We are happy to see that Singapore is willing to provide legal assistance and to jointly fight cross-country crime," the Central News Agency (CNA) quoted Deputy Foreign Minister Andrew Hsia as saying.

Hsia made the remark after Singapore's trade office announced that Singapore would assist Taiwan in probing the suspected money laundering by former president Chen and his family.

Because it refuses to allow its financial system to be used for illegal activities, Singapore contacted Taiwan's Supreme Prosecutor's Office to provide the necessary assistance allowable by Singaporean law, Singapore's trade office was reported as saying.

In January 2008, Chen's wife Wu Shu-chen deposited 20 million US dollars - campaign funds from the 2000 and 2004 presidential election which Chen has not declared - into several foreign bank accounts, and eventually into a Swiss bank account.

One of the deposits was made to an account at the Standard Merchant Bank Asia in Singapore opened by Wu's elder brother Wu Ching-mao.

Taiwan has also required legal assistance from Swiss prosecutors.

Chen, former chairman of the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), served as Taiwan's president from 2000-2004 and from 2004-2008.

Corruption scandals involving Chen's family and DPP officials caused the party to lose the 2008 election to the pro-China Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT).

Chen quit the DPP on August 15 as the party, in reaction to his money laundering allegations, was preparing to expel him.

Source: The Earth Times
on Saturday, May 5, 2012
The Special Investigation Division of the Supreme Prosecutors Office on Friday listed a college classmate of former first lady Wu Shu-jen as a defendant for allegedly helping Wu with money laundering, increasing the number of defendants in the case to 12.

Prosecutor Chen Yun-nan, director of the division, confirmed that his division had summoned Wu's former classmate Tsai Mei-li for questioning as a defendant in the case, but said Tsai begged out of the session because she was ill.

Tsai's two brothers -- Tsai Ming-che and Tsai Ming-chieh -- have already been listed as defendants in the case for allegedly serving as proxies in helping the former first family launder money abroad.

In addition to Wu, three other members of the former first family -- former President Chen Shui-bian, son Chen Chih-chung and daughter-in-law Huang Jui-ching -- have all been listed as chief defendants in the money laundering case.

Others listed as defendants include the former first lady's elder brother Wu Ching-mao, his wife Chen Chun-ying, former Mega Financial Holding Co. Chairman Cheng Shen-chih, Yuanta Securities board member Tu Li-ping, and former Presidential Office cashier Chen Chen-hui.

None of those listed as defendants in the case have been indicted on charges related to money laundering, as at this stage in the investigation they are still only viewed as suspects.

Wu Ching-mao was released Nov. 28 on NT$2 million (US$59,580) bail after he had been held in custody for 53 days to prevent possible collusion among the defendants and witnesses.

Prosecutors who examined the information provided by judicial authorities of Singapore about an account owned by Wu Ching-mao believe they have enough evidence to suspect that Tsai Mei-li and her brothers helped the former first lady transfer millions of U. S. dollars illegally to her brother's account with South Africa's Standard Bank in Singapore through their bank accounts in Hong Kong.

Prosecutors found that they money was later wired to a Swiss bank account held by the son and daughter-in-law of the former president and his wife.

Before listing Tsai Mei-li as a defendant, the prosecutors questioned her four times. On Sept. 25, they searched her residence and office for possible evidence. Her brother Tsai Ming-che has been held in custody since Oct. 2.

In addition to their alleged violations of laws against money laundering, Chen Shui-bian and his wife also face investigation on charges of embezzling state affairs funds of the Presidential Office and accepting bribes during the former president's two terms between 2000 and 2008.

With the permission of the Taipei District Court, the Special Investigation Division has detained the former president since Nov. 12, after interrogating him for six hours a day earlier.

Source: Taiwan News
The family of former Taiwan President, Chen Shui-bian, is accused of laundering money in several overseas accounts, including in the Cayman Islands.

Chen`s family is suspected of depositing at least T$1 billion in banks in Japan, the United States, the Cayman Islands, Singapore and Switzerland, among other places, Taiwan media reports indicate.

But Chen has denied any wrongdoing.

`There is absolutely no graft, absolutely no stolen money,` he told a news conference this week.

Chen has admitted `expatriating` $20 million, but claims the money came from unused campaign contributions - permissible under Taiwan's law at the time - and was intended to underwrite the island's `diplomatic work.`

Source: Carib World News
on Thursday, April 12, 2012
The Alpine principality will start helping other nations claw back missing tax revenues.

Timing is everything these days, especially for a tax haven like Liechtenstein. A day before finance ministers of the Group of 20 were due to meet to discuss new guidelines to stop tax evasion, one of the world’s favored destinations for such shenanigans said it would start helping other nations claw back their missing tax revenues.

The tiny Alpine principality said Thursday that it was dropping its distinction between tax evasion and tax fraud, an issue that has frustrated tax authorities in the United States and Germany because Liechtenstein previously insisted on only handing over data in cases of outright tax fraud.

It now says it has already begun “concrete talks” with other nations and was offering bilateral tax agreements in cases of tax fraud and tax evasion. "We are aware of our responsibility as part of a globally integrated economic area,” Prime Minister Otmar Hasler said. “With today's declaration, we are making our contribution to a joint solution that will make an effective enforcement of foreign tax claims possible.”

International organizations such as the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development have been lobbying for more transparency from tax havens like Liechtenstein, Switzerland and Luxembourg for many years now. But the crackdown has now reached a critical stage as governments around the world seek to tighten financial regulations to prevent another repeat of the credit crunch while desperately trying find new tax revenues.

France and Germany have already asked the OECD to prepare information on tax havens for the G-20 meeting in London on April 2. On Tuesday, France’s La Tribune reported that the OECD was adding Switzerland, Luxembourg, Austria, Singapore and Hong Kong to its list of noncooperative tax centers, which already included Liechtenstein.

Stephen Platt, chairman of the BakerPlatt Group and specialist in anti-money-laundering, said that Liechtenstein’s move was “essential” to its ongoing survival. "It is simply untenable within this climate and this environment for centers to continue not to criminalize the laundering of the proceeds of foreign tax evasion," he said, adding that in the long term such rules were “unsustainable and not good for your reputation.”

But the international backlash against tax havens by governments and the G-20 may also be too indiscriminate, he said, because of the “very real and distinguishing” differences between them. While Liechtenstein is only now amending its laws on tax evasion, other offshore financial centers like Jersey and Guernsey already did so a decade ago; Switzerland, the Cayman Islands and Singapore have not.

Meanwhile there is the other elephant in the room: banking secrecy. Liechtenstein seems keen to keep its rules in that area unchanged. "Our bank secrecy has always served to ensure the legitimate protection of the privacy of the citizen, which we will continue to retain,” Hasler said Thursday.

Platt believes that the G-20 nations are looking at tax evasion and banking secrecy as two related but distinctly important issues. “The criminalization of laundering of tax evasion is equally as important, [but] tax havens that do not address bank secrecy need to see it addressed,” he said.

Source: Forbes
on Friday, April 6, 2012
Police said Thursday they had arrested two people linked to international money laundering crimes on the Internet.

"The suspects were arrested two days ago in Medan *in North Sumatra*," National Police chief of criminal investigation division Com. Gen. Susno Duadji told The Jakarta Post.

"They are suspected of committing fraud via the Internet," he added.

Tempo Interaktif news portal identified the suspects as Hendrianto, a 45-year old Indonesian citizen and Singaporean Yap Kok Yong Carlson, 30, who were swooped on at the Swiss Bell Hotel in Medan.

Susno said the police were still pursuing four other members of the syndicate, namely Andreas Nicholas, a UK national, Ricard Pereira of Singapore, Phanos Tenizes of Cyprus and Christanto of Indonesia.

Susno said the four fugitives were already on an international wanted list of criminals.

"We are cooperating with the British Interpol to nab Andreas," he told tempointeraktif.com earlier Thursday.

The investigation, Susno said, began when the Austrian Embassy received a report from one of its citizens, Emmeran Fischer, who had fallen victim to the syndicate.

Fischer, Susno said, saw an ad-vertisement for cheap electronic goods at www.alibaba.com. On Dec. 8, 2008, Fischer met with the suspects at the MMTC Warehouse, on Jl. Williem Iskandar No. B-20 in Pancing, Medan.

Their transaction involved 32,000 units of electronic goods, including 5,000 Nintendo Wiis, 5,000 Nintendo NHL Games, 5,000 Nintendo Pro Evolution Games, 5,400 Sony PS3s, and 800 Apple iPhones.

"The transaction had a value of around US$1 million," said Susno. Fischer transferred the money to Bank Mega's branch in Batam, through the JP Morgan Chase Bank in New York.

The delivery was made to company named Anugerah Jaya Perkasa. However, when the delivery deadline came around on Dec. 20, 2008, the purchased goods never arrived in Vienna, Austria.

The offenders claimed bad weather had impeded the delivery, and requested more money to send the goods by sea.

"The victim then sent an additional $900,000 for the delivery," Susno said. "But the promise was still not upheld."

Following leads from the report, the police went to the warehouse and found two boxes containing thousands of packages.

However, when the packages were thoroughly searched, police revealed they contained nothing more than bricks and paper.

"Only three packages contained electronic goods and they were the samples used during the initial transaction," he said.

The police and the Report and Financial Transaction Analysis Center (PPATK) are currently investigating a possible money laundering operation through three bank accounts belonging to the suspects.

The banks involved Panin Bank's branch in Medan, Bank Niaga's branch in Medan, Bank Mega's branch in Medan and DBS Bank in Singapore

Source: The Jakarta Post
on Tuesday, February 28, 2012
Bangladesh's top anti-corruption body has charged the eldest son of ex-premier Khaleda Zia with laundering three million dollars to bank accounts in Singapore, police said.

Dhaka police chief Hosne Ara said the Anti-Corruption Commission had filed charges against Mr Zia's son Tareque Rahman and his friend Giasuddin Al Mamum.

"They are charged with laundering 204 million taka (2.95 million dollars) to banks including Citibank in Singapore," he said.

The ACC lead investigator Mohammad Ibrahim said the money was allegedly received by Mr Mammum from a construction company in exchange for awarding a state power plant contract, he said.

"Tareque is an accused as he was also a beneficiary of the money," he said, adding that the cash had been clawed back from Singapore by the government.

This is the second case the ACC has filed against Mr Zia's eldest son, long considered as her heir apparent. He is also a senior joint-secretary general of Mr Zia's Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP).

Mr Tareque was frequently referred to as the most powerful man in Bangladesh when Zia was prime minister in her second term from 2001-2006.

He was arrested by an army-backed emergency government, which ruled for two years from January 2007, as part of a nationwide crackdown on graft.

He is now abroad seeking medical treatment and alleges he was tortured in custody.

In September, a Dhaka court ruled that Mr Zia and her eldest son should go on trial after they were charged with embezzling more than $US300,000 ($326,254) meant for an orphanage.

They denied any wrongdoing and said the charges were politically motivated.

Mr Zia's youngest son, Arafat Rahman Koko, also faces corruption charges and is accused of laundering more than 2.7 million dollars through bank accounts in Singapore. He is also abroad for medical treatment.

Source: The Australian
on Saturday, January 13, 2007
By Douglas Bakshian
Cebu, Philippines
12 January 2007

Southeast Asian foreign ministers have taken a step forward in the war on terrorism, preparing a draft convention that allows security agencies to cooperate more on tracking, finding and prosecuting terrorists. The draft was approved Friday, and leaders of the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations are expected to give their final approval Saturday. Douglas Bakshian reports from the ASEAN summit in the Philippine city of Cebu.

The convention is designed to clamp down on the unregulated movement of arms and militants in the region. The draft says ASEAN's individual national security agencies would have to coordinate their efforts to track, arrest, detain and rehabilitate suspected militants. They would also be required to beef up border controls and suppress terrorist financing.

The convention would make it a legal obligation for the 10 ASEAN countries to work together in these areas.

Rohan Gunaratna, a terrorism specialist at the Singapore Institute of Defense and Strategic Studies, says this is a step in the right direction in the war on terror.

"It will have a significant impact because today the specialist counter-terrorism capabilities of individual governments are quite good, but there is limited cooperation, coordination and collaboration between the governments," he said. "If there is greater understanding and agreement … then certainly the national security agencies … will cooperate much better to fight terrorism and extremism more effectively."

Gunaratna says terrorist and extremist groups in the region are cooperating and collaborating with each other, so the authorities must work together in a similar manner to counter the threat. He says terrorists are constantly moving among the Philippines, Indonesia and Malaysia, nations with many large and small islands that make the borders difficult to police.

Summit spokesman Victoriano says the convention would bring ASEAN into line with internationally accepted definitions of terrorism.

"The ASEAN countries will adopt the definitions of what constitute terror-related crimes spelled out in various U.N. conventions, which could be against aircraft, airports, seacraft, maritime structures and the like," he said.

Terrorism is a persistent problem in the region. Just days ago, the southern Philippines was rocked by several bombings that killed at least six people and wounded dozens. Authorities suspect the bombings were the work of a local militant who is working with the regional Islamic terrorist group, Jemaah Islamiyah.

Jemaah Islamiyah is accused of being behind bombings on the Indonesian island of Bali in 2002 and 2005 that together killed 225 people. The group is also accused of several other fatal bombings over the past several years in Jakarta, and in the Philippines.

There has also been terrorist activity in recent years in Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand.

http://www.voanews.com/english/2007-01-12-voa70.cfm
By Bill Tarrant

CEBU, Philippines (Reuters) - Leaders of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations adopted on Friday bold proposals that could turn a group often derided as a talk shop to a rules-based bloc with bite.

The 10 leaders, whose members range from an absolute monarchy and military juntas to parliamentary democracies and one-party communist states, have agreed to start drafting a charter that would give ASEAN a legal basis for the first time since it was founded at the height of the Vietnam war nearly 40 years ago.

At a news conference to announce the decision, an ASEAN "Eminent Persons Group" said they studied the European Union as a reference, but that ASEAN would not become another Brussels.

"Since visiting the EU, I've become more conservative with ASEAN, because we learned that the EU is not that good an organisation that can be transferred to ASEAN," said former Malaysian deputy premier Musa Hitam.

The group will still take decisions by consensus for sensitive issues, but will conduct voting over non-controversial issues, according to a summary of the proposals.

The most ground-breaking proposal gives ASEAN the power to suspend, or in extreme cases, expel members for serious breaches of the charter.

Panel chairman and former Philippines president Fidel Ramos said an ASEAN charter will allow the group to compete as a bloc in the "new order" of the 21st century.

"We must reposition ourselves to be more competitive in a globalised economy and the new order of the 21st century."

CARING AND SHARING

The ASEAN leaders arrived in the central Philippines city of Cebu for a summit -- rescheduled from last month amid typhoon and terrorist warnings -- that aims to create a "caring and sharing" community in the region.

Men in traditional island gear stood atop a new convention centre in Cebu blowing conch horns. Women in flowing green gowns danced and twirled red umbrellas on the ground as presidents, prime ministers, a king and former generals pulled up in limousines.

Searchlights raked the night, filled with the sounds of beating drums and shrieking whistles in a cacophonous Filipino welcome.

A sudden downpour did little to dampen spirits for the biggest event in Cebu since Ferdinand Magellan ended his circumnavigation of the globe here in 1521, slain by a chieftain unhappy that his land was being claimed in the name of Spain.

The Philippines was on high alert after three bombings on Wednesday night, hundreds of miles to the south of the venue, killed eight people and wounded dozens.

Officials suspected Islamic militants and said the blasts were designed to embarrass the Philippines ahead of the ASEAN meetings and a broader East Asia summit next week. More than 13,000 police and troops have been deployed in and around Cebu.

The series of ASEAN meetings began with foreign ministers rebuking Myanmar on Thursday for dragging its feet on democratic reforms it has promised ASEAN it would take.

The new charter proposals could theoretically put Myanmar's membership in jeopardy if the junta continued to be recalcitrant.

The grouping, with a population the size of Europe's, plans to bring forward the establishment of an economic community from 2020 to 2015, according to a draft declaration.

ASEAN leaders will also discuss poverty alleviation in countries that have some of the globe's smallest per capita incomes, and disaster prevention in a region that has seen a devastating tsunami, earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, floods, forest fires and pandemics over the last couple of years.

Southeast Asian leaders will also sign a counter-terrorism agreement that will clamp down on the movement of arms and fighters between its remote islands through information exchange, border controls and a crackdown on terrorist financing.

ASEAN groups Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.

(Additional reporting by Carmel Crimmins, Manny Mogato, Chris Buckley, and Rosemarie Francisco)

© Reuters 2007. All Rights Reserved.

http://in.today.reuters.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=worldNews&storyID=2007-01-12T193955Z_01_NOOTR_RTRJONC_0_India-283347-1.xml