Deccan Chronicle

Chinese bank in money-laundering case

Chinese organised crime siphoned up to $1.4b, according to Spain ■

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Madrid, July 31: A few minutes before 8 pm on August 8, 2012, two Chinese living in Spain — a banker and her client —held a blunt phone conversati­on.

Wang Jing was a senior officer at the Madrid branch of the state-controlled Industrial and Commercial Bank of China. The client, Xu Kai, was an alleged top figure in an internatio­nal money laundering group that was suspected of using the bank to transfer illegal income to China. The network was allegedly using multiple accounts in the name of Chinese residents of Spain, in some cases without their permission, to make the transfers. But there had been a hitch.

Earlier that day, banker Wang said, a woman had come to the branch to complain that transfers were being made from her account without her knowledge. Wang chided Xu, telling her to make sure that account holders used in the scheme were on board.

“You have to look out for yourself and make sure these people are obedient,” Wang warned. More complaints would lead to “problems” for the bank, Wang added.

In fact, the bank already had problems. Big problems. Spanish police were listening.

Wang’s warning to Xu is documented in confidenti­al court filings that include wiretap transcript­s from a series of police investigat­ions starting in 2009 into Chinese organised crime in Spain.

The Spanish authoritie­s have said publicly they suspect these groups siphoned up to 1.2 billion euros ($1.4 billion) out of Spain to China between 2009 and the end of 2012.

The wiretaps and findings from police investigat­ions ultimately led Spanish investigat­ors to the front door of the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, or ICBC — the world’s biggest bank by assets. On the morning of Feb. 17 last year, dozens of police officers burst into the bank’s Madrid branch and arrested Wang Jing and four other senior managers. Two more executives were arrested after the raid.

In a statement released in May last year, Spanish prosecutor­s said the giant Chinese state-run lender was a conduit for laundering tens of millions of euros in illegal funds from tax fraud and smuggling by “Chinese criminal organisati­ons.” The sums laundered were so large, the prosecutor­s said, that “the damage to the socioecono­mic order and the national economy is clear.” — Reuters

■ PAGES OF confidenti­al case submission­s reviewed by Reuters, and interviews, provide the detailed account of the alleged racket and show that the probe reaches high into the state-run bank’s European operation.

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