Money launderer’s dream
Mon, 5 October 2015 ppp
Daniel Pye
Cambodia's
anti-money laundering agency is unable to investigate or penalise
financial institutions that break the law, leaving the country open to
exploitation by organised crime, according to a senior official in the
unit.
The
Financial Action Task Force (FATF) – the top international anti-money
laundering and counterterrorism financing body – ceased its monitoring
of Cambodia in February, even though the Financial Intelligence Unit
(CAFIU), the state agency tasked with investigating and prosecuting
financial crimes, was so under-staffed and under-resourced it had not
investigated a single financial institution since its founding in 2008.
In
early 2014, Cambodia was downgraded to FATF’s “dark-grey list” for
lacking an asset-freezing instrument or a currency declaration system.
The downgrade left the Kingdom just one step away from being blacklisted
as a high-risk jurisdiction.
The
government passed a sub-decree only a month later, which amended the
2007 Anti-Money Laundering Law to meet FATF’s requirements, leading the
body to remove Cambodia from the list.
However,
despite the progress on paper, CAFIU adviser Phan Ho told Daniel
Glaser, assistant secretary for terrorist financing at the US Treasury
Department, that while the unit was “working very hard to enforce” the
law it “had only 10 people to inspect 38 banks and 37 [micro-finance
institutions]”.
As
a result, the FIU “had never fined, sanctioned or penalised any
financial institution in Cambodia”, Ho said, according to a classified
US State Department cable obtained by the Post.
A
major cause for concern was the gambling industry, as Ho admitted that
the CAFIU had not received a single suspicious transaction report from
any of Cambodia’s casinos, most of which are foreign-owned.
Casinos
have been legally required to report suspicious transactions to the
CAFIU, a division of the National Bank of Cambodia, since the law came
into effect. Not doing so can result in steep fines and even the
company’s dissolution if serious negligence occurred.
Ho,
of the CAFIU, this week declined to comment on the work of the agency.
Several members of the National Coordination Committee on
Anti-Money-Laundering and Combating the Financing of Terrorism,
including Prime Minister Hun Sen’s son-in-law, Dy Vichea, could not be
reached.
Aun
Porn Moniroth, the minister of economy and finance, assured Glaser that
Cambodia would “spare no efforts to improve the [anti-money laundering]
system”, but admitted that “legal loopholes” remained a “serious
obstacle to further progress in financial sector regulation”.
Porn
Moniroth blamed the shortfalls on dramatic economic growth over the
past decade, combined with a lack of resources and a historical reliance
on cash-based transactions.
The
unregulated financial sector, coupled with a tightening of restrictions
in Myanmar and China in recent years, has also increased the likelihood
that North Korea will look to Cambodia to access the formal financial
sector, circumventing sanctions to fund its nuclear and
ballistic-missile programs, the State Department cable reads.
Opposition
MP Son Chhay, vice chair of the National Assembly’s finance and audit
commission, said “Cambodia has become a heaven for this kind of
activity”.
“We’re
losing something like $300 million a year. Money is not just flowing
in, it’s flowing out,” he said. “The government does not have a
commitment to this issue. They seem to believe that money laundering
supports the economy. We don’t have the political will or commitment to
address the issue.”
Chhay
added that while banks appear to be in better shape, the lack of a law
regulating casinos had left the door open to organised crime, including
drug- and people-trafficking groups.
Lorien
Pilling, the director of UK-based Global Betting and Gaming
Consultants, said that it was unheard-of for a regulator not to receive
any reports of suspicious transactions.
“The
nature of the casino business – cash-based and with a high frequency of
transactions – means that it is more likely than some other business
sectors to see suspicious activity with regard to crimes like money
laundering,” he said.
Casinos
in Cambodia are required to report transactions of $10,000 or more, as
well as others deemed “suspicious” under the rules.
“Given
that the majority of Cambodia’s casino visitors are foreign nationals, a
rigorous approach to suspicious transactions is all the more important.
In any market, it is vital for casinos to know their customers and to
prevent gaming floors from being used to launder the proceeds of crime,”
Pilling added.
Most
of Cambodia’s more than two dozen casinos are clustered near the
borders with Thailand and Vietnam. The US in 2009 reported that the
majority of these establishments use Vietnamese and Thai bank accounts
to obscure the flow of money.
Several
leading casinos either declined to comment on their reporting practices
or did not respond to repeated requests for comment. NagaCorp Ltd,
owner of the mammoth NagaWorld casino in Phnom Penh, commissioned an
independent review of its own internal anti-money laundering practices
late last year, the results of which are due to be published in its
annual report in early 2016.
The
management of NagaWorld, which reported profits of $101 million for the
first six months of the year, did not respond to requests for comment.
In
Channy, the CEO of Acleda Bank, said that he could not comment on the
gambling industry, although he told Glaser back in 2014 that fraud and
lottery schemes were also “major illicit finance risks to the banking
system”.
In
an interview this week, he said that many banks were kept in check by
their partner institutions in other countries where there is stricter
enforcement of anti-money laundering laws.
“You
could say that all banks comply. If you don’t comply, you will lose
your business. If you don’t comply, it may be that your partner will
reject you. Not only the bank in Cambodia will have a problem, the banks
in the US will also be in trouble.”
The
US Treasury Department said in a statement that FATF had decided that
the necessary laws and regulations were passed making Cambodia
“technically compliant” with its pledges. It said that some “outreach”
to casinos had been done by the CAFIU, but encouraged the government to
“ensure that the law is being enforced”.
The
government formed a new inter-ministerial working group on money
laundering last month ahead of an assessment by the Asia/Pacific Group
on Money Laundering due late next year.
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