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Friday 10 April 2009

Tiny Pacific Island Is Facing Money-Laundering Sanctions

Agence France Presse 

An international consortium fighting money laundering has taken action for the first time in its 12-year history against a sovereign state — the tiny Pacific island of Nauru.

The independent Financial Action Task Force on Money Laundering said today that it would take action against Nauru, a Pacific island nation, that is accused of acting as a center for laundering money for the Russian mafia. The consortium, which operates under the auspices of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, was established in 1989 by the major industrialized nations.

The consortium said in a statement that its members "will take countermeasures against Nauru," which it said had failed to meet a Nov. 30 deadline "to make appropriate legislative amendments to its Aug. 28 law against money laundering."

It said it would "closely follow the situation in Nauru and would raise the issue at its next meeting in Hong Kong, from Jan. 30 to Feb. 1, next year."

The consortium's statement says that it "hopes that Nauru will address the shortcomings that have been raised before this meeting."

The 29-nation body had given the Pacific atoll until last Friday to make the necessary legal changes and focus its attention on about 450 offshore banks that are based on the island and registered to a single government post office box.

The money-laundering watchdog body said in June that it would monitor financial transactions on the island and threatened that offshore tax haven, along with Russia and the Philippines, with sanctions if it failed to comply.

The Parliament of the island, which has a population numbering just 12,000, plans to hold an emergency session on Thursday to pass the necessary amendments to its money- laundering legislation, the government announced earlier.

Nauru operates as an offshore tax haven and stands accused of laundering around $70 billion in Russian mafia money.

Last Friday, Patrick Moulette, the executive secretary of the consortium, said it expected to impose sanctions on Nauru.

He said, "As soon as we are certain, today or at the beginning of next week, we will send a circular to member countries informing them that the countermeasures envisaged have to be applied."

Earlier this year, Nauru passed laws against money laundering but failed to impress the rest of the world with those moves.

The consortium and the Asia Pacific Group, a regional group working against money laundering, have provided detailed legislative assistance to Nauru, but it has lacked the political will to carry through.

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