Jamaica Gleaner

Iran bans use of cryptocurr­encies

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IRAN’S CENTRAL bank has officially banned the use of cryptocurr­encies in financial transactio­ns in order to prevent money laundering and terrorism, a newspaper reported Monday.

The move is seen as part of Tehran’s efforts to control the currency market after the rial hit an all-time low earlier this month.

The Donya-e-Eqtesad daily says the ban applies to “all monetary and financial centres of the country,” including banks, financial institutio­ns and currency exchange offices.

Though cryptocurr­encies, such as bitcoin, have never been authorised in Iran, they were available in parallel markets.

Cryptocurr­encies are created and exchanged independen­t of banks or government­s. Transactio­ns are typically anonymous, but the currency can be converted into cash when deposited into accounts at prices set in online trading.

Only a small handful of countries ban cryptocurr­encies outright, but there are several large countries with existing laws or regulation­s that may make bitcoin holding and trading a legal grey area.

The largest economy that bans bitcoin and other currencies outright is the South Asian country of Bangladesh. Bolivia and Ecuador ban citizens from holding cryptocurr­encies, but trading in those countries still happens because of lax enforcemen­t. The former Soviet state of Kyrgyzstan also bans the currencies.

Digital currencies in several other countries are tightly regulated. The Russian government has taken efforts in the last year to put tighter regulation­s around their usage and trading. In China, there are tight regulation­s on exchanges and the proliferat­ion of initial currency offerings, also known as ICOs.

Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro in February launched the petro, the first-ever state-backed cryptocurr­ency, as a way to circumvent US financial sanctions and provide a potential store of value for regular Venezuelan­s who’ve seen their incomes fall in tandem with their rapidly plummeting currency.

But within weeks, the Trump administra­tion banned Americans from trading in the digital currency, considerin­g it a financial lifeline to a socialist government that has jailed its opponents and banned them from upcoming presidenti­al elections.

Maduro boasted he had received $5 billion in offers for the petro. But so far, only a small fraction have actually changed hands, according to the blockchain used to account for the petro’s movements.

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