Sunday, 22 June 2008

UAE to improve anti money laundering regulations

The United Arab Emirates (UAE) has implemented new anti-money laundering regulations in an effort to meet international standards of financial compliance. The central bank in the middle of june notified banks and exchange houses of the 13 new regulations that update the UAE’s first anti-money laundering controls, which came into force in November 2000.

The new measures require banks to carry out more due diligence on prospective customers, applying many existing practices still ignored by some local and regional institutions.
“These new requirements have come in response to the remarks of the assessment team in March to try to fill in the gap with international requirements,” a central bank official said.
The new regulations, which include five amendments to the 2000 law, bring down the threshold at which banks are forced to verify the name and address of remitters from Dh40,000 ($11,000) to Dh3,500.

They also require banks to engage in enhanced due diligence to determine whether “foreign politically exposed persons” are trying to open an account in the UAE, as well as officially banning all financial relationships with “shell banks or companies”.

Banks should carry out extra due diligence on dealers in precious stones, real estate and luxury goods. There were concerns that the booming property sector of Dubai, and now Abu Dhabi, could be used by money launderers.

There is also a move to regulate hawala, the informal money transfer system used across the Middle East and South Asia.

The central bank has also called on senior management to approve the opening of new correspondent banking relationships with foreign banks, taking care when they “are headquartered in countries which are reported to be involved in drugs, a high level of public corruption and/or criminal/terrorist activities”.

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