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Money laundering: Malta, Luxembourg face EU legal action

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BRUSSELS: The European Commission on Thursday stepped up legal action against Malta and Luxembourg for not fully applying European Union rules to prevent money laundering at banks and through companies.


They are among several EU states where banks have been embroiled in money laundering scandals, but they have failed to strengthen their rules to counter financial crime, according to the EU Commission.


Malta has been subject to a rarely-used disciplinary procedure after serious shortcomings emerged in its supervision of Pilatus Bank, an international lender based on the island that was shut down this week by the European Central Bank over money laundering and fraud allegations.


The lender had received a clean sheet from Maltese authorities despite allegations of processing corrupt payments for senior Azeri and Maltese figures by investigative journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia, who was killed a year ago by a car bomb.


There is no proven link between her murder and the reports she wrote about the bank. Maltese authorities only took measures against the bank after its chairman was charged with financial crimes in the United States.


Following an investigation by the European Banking Authority, the bloc’s watchdog, the Commission said on Thursday it would require changes in the way the Maltese anti-money laundering supervisor, the Financial Intelligence Analysis Unit (FIAU), operates.


EU anti-money laundering rules “need to be enforced with the same high standards across the EU to avoid creating any weak link,” EU justice commissioner Vera Jourova said.


The FIAU has ten days to comply with the requirements, which include enhancing its monitoring of and sanction proceedings against banks, gaming companies and other sectors that could be used to launder dirty money. In a separate decision, the Commission sued Luxembourg for not fully applying the new rules and asked the EU Court of Justice to charge a lump sum and daily penalties until it takes the necessary action.


The revised rules — requiring disclosure of the owners of companies and trusts, stronger sanctioning powers against money laundering and stricter checks on banks, lawyers and accountants — had to be applied in EU states by June 2018, but Luxembourg had failed to fully implement them.


—- Reuters


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