• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Anti-laundering unit goes off-grid, fraying Afghan ties to global finance

September 15, 2021 by David Barret Leave a Comment

September 15, 2021

By Tom Arnold

LONDON (Reuters) – A unit in Afghanistan’s central bank leading a 15-year effort to counter illicit funding flows has halted operations, four staff members said, threatening to hasten the country’s slide out of the global financial system.

Since 2006, the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Center of Afghanistan (FinTRACA) has gathered intelligence on thousands of suspicious transactions and helped convict smugglers and terrorist financiers, according to its website.

UN officials have said the Taliban, who seized Kabul on Aug. 15, made hundreds of millions of dollars from the drugs trade and other illicit sources when they were fighting government troops. The group has vowed there would be no drug cultivation in Afghanistan from now.

Information on FinTRACA’s website indicated the Taliban were among those in its sights, while the staff Reuters spoke to said the group had been a target since its launch.

They declined to be named because of fear of reprisals owing to the sensitive nature of their work.

With the Islamist militant movement back in power, the absence of a functioning financial intelligence unit (FIU) could curtail Afghanistan’s links to the international financial system and to lenders abroad, some experts warned.

Such units, which scrutinise money flows for potential suspicious activity, are critical for any nation that seeks to participate in the global financial community, said Stuart Jones, Jr., founder and chief executive of risk intelligence firm Sigma Ratings.

He was also U.S. Treasury attache to Afghanistan between 2008 and 2010.

Reconnecting with the financial system could be complicated by existing sanctions against the Taliban and the fact that a senior government minister heads a U.S.-designated terrorist organisation.

“Afghanistan was considered high-risk by nearly all global financial institutions pre-Taliban takeover,” said Jones.

“Now, with untested leadership at the central bank, an inoperable financial intelligence unit and current asset freezes on the ruling government by the United Nations and terror designations of key figures by the United States, I would expect foreign financial institutions to tread extremely carefully.”

The central bank did not respond to several attempts to reach it via email and telephone.

The Taliban want access to reserves https://ift.tt/2XdrwSk being held abroad as well as aid and other financing, as the economy reels from decades of war, drought, food shortages and the exodus of thousands of professionals.

STAFF FLED

The Taliban have said they want professionals to return to work to help revive the economy and vowed there would be no vendetta against old opponents. But many members of the ousted administration have fled the country or remain in hiding.

Three staff members said some of FinTRACA’s 60-odd employees had left Afghanistan or gone underground in recent weeks.

One, who is still in Afghanistan, complained that international partners failed to get staff and their dependents out during the mass evacuation from Kabul that ended last month.

A Taliban spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the status of FinTRACA staff or whether the unit would operate in future.

The U.S. Treasury, which provided technical assistance to the unit with other national and international bodies, declined to comment on FinTRACA staff still in Afghanistan.

Some FinTRACA staff returned to the office last week after a request by acting central bank governor, Haji Mohammad Idris – a Taliban loyalist – for all central bank staff to be present in the bank, said one of the employees.

The employee added that the unit’s senior management were not present and it was still not operating.

Some parts of the central bank are operational. Idris has been meeting with commercial banks and the central bank has supplied limited liquidity to banks while issuing directives to control scarce U.S. dollar supplies https://ift.tt/3nO00G7, say bankers.

UNIT DISCONNECTED

FinTRACA provided intelligence to the international community through agreements with similar units from countries including Britain and the United States.

It also did so via Egmont Group, which exchanges information on illicit flows between more than 160 intelligence units and partners different bodies in the fight against money laundering and terror financing.

FinTRACA was disconnected from Egmont Group’s international secure server on Aug. 15, the day the Taliban took Kabul, Egmont Group said on Sept. 2.

The group said it stood “in solidarity with our colleagues at FinTRACA and hopes that they and their families are safe.”

Egmont Group did not respond to requests for an update on FinTRACA’s status. One FinTRACA staff member said it was still disconnected on Tuesday.

“Disconnecting is a loss for the global FIU community as the aim is always to foster greater cooperation, but the underlying principle under which this cooperation takes place is trust and that is not in place at the moment in Afghanistan,” said Mariano Federici, managing director of K2 Integrity and former chair of Egmont Group.

FinTRACA’s website, which appears largely untouched since the Taliban’s takeover, lists the Taliban as a terrorist group entity prohibited from depositing or withdrawing U.S. dollar bank notes.

One of the unit’s roles included creating a “Watch-List” of individuals deemed high-risk to the financial system.

As recently as August, the unit logged 25 suspicious transactions reports in its database, taking the total for the year to date to 645, data on its website show.

With FinTRACA mothballed, local banks expect Afghanistan’s status to be lowered by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), an illicit flows watchdog, in a move that could further diminish its connectivity to the global financial community.

“The FATF is closely monitoring the developing situation in Afghanistan,” the group said in a statement.

The Asia/Pacific Group on Money Laundering, of which Afghanistan is a member, did not respond to a request for comment.

(Additional reporting by Karin Strohecker and Andrea Shalal; Editing by Mike Collett-White)

Source Link Anti-laundering unit goes off-grid, fraying Afghan ties to global finance

David Barret
David Barret

Related posts:

  1. First trailer for Netflix’s Red Notice crams in massive star power and big action
  2. U.S. has no plans to release billions in Afghan assets, Treasury says
  3. Exclusive-Ericsson CEO to double down on China as 5G tussle rumbles on
  4. Cricket-Pope and Bairstow rebuild England innings after Yadav blows

Filed Under: News

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

  • First-Ever Footage Of Sun’s South Pole, What’s Up With The NB.1.8.1 COVID-19 Variant? And Much More This Week
  • How Many People Survived The Titanic?
  • With Quantum Entanglement And Blockchain, We Can Finally Generate Real Random Numbers
  • Atmospheric Rivers Over Antarctica Could Double By 2100 Due To Climate Change
  • Ice Age Puppies, Sauropod’s Last Supper, And A First Look At The Sun’s Butt
  • “Mother Nature” Has Legal Rights In Ecuador, But Does It Help Save The Planet?
  • Now Is The Best Time To See The Milky Way’s Glowing Core In All Its Glory
  • Why Does Japan Have Blue Traffic Lights? It’s All To Do With Language
  • Phantom Pain Isn’t Limited To Limbs, See Also: Erections, Period Cramps, And Farts
  • 1782, The Year A Caterpillar Outbreak Terrified London
  • “It Shoots This Gooey, Gross, Juicy Thing That Freezes Its Enemies”: Is This The World’s Weirdest Worm?
  • Lithium-Rich Mineral Found In Only One Place On Earth Has Its Recipe Finally Revealed
  • There Is A Very Particular Reason Why Baboons Travel In Straight Lines
  • 2,000-Year-Old Leather Shoe Reveals Some Roman Soldiers Had Massive Feet
  • NASA Might Have Accidentally Landed Near A Volcano On Mars
  • “Breakthrough” Technique Could Produce “Smart” Dental Implants That Feel And Function Like Real Teeth
  • MERS-Like Coronaviruses May Be Just “A Small Step Away” From Jumping Into Humans
  • A 1-Kilometer-Long Stone Age Megastructure Under The Baltic Sea Is Being Investigated By Archaeologists
  • New Deepest Map Of The Universe Reaches Back 13.5 Billion Years Into The Past
  • The Guugu Yimithirr Language Is Notable For Not Having A “Left” Or “Right”
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version