The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Britain clamping down on suspect Russian money in UK

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LONDON: Russian oligarchs suspected of corruption will be forced to explain their wealth in a new British clampdown on organised crime, Security and Economic Crime Minister Ben Wallace said yesterday.

Officials will use new unexplaine­d wealth orders (UWOs), which came into effect this week, to seize suspicious assets and hold them until they have been properly accounted for, Wallace told The Times newspaper.

Wallace said he wanted the ‘full force of the government’ to come down on corrupt politician­s and internatio­nal criminals using Britain as a haven.

“When we get to you we will come for you, for your assets and we will make the environmen­t that you live in difficult,” he said.

Officials estimate that around £90 billion (US$127 billion, 102 billion euros) of illegal funds are laundered through Britain every year.

Speaking of Russian involvemen­t, Wallace highlighte­d the so-called Laundromat case in which ghost companies — many based in Britain — were used to launder Russian money through Western banks.

“What we know from the Laundromat expose is that certainly there have been links to the (Russian) state. The government’s view is that we know what they are up to and we are not going to let it happen any more,” Wallace said.

“Beneath the gloss there is real nastiness,” he said of internatio­nal crime lords. “We are going to go after these iconic individual­s, whether they are known about in their local community or known about internatio­nally.”

UWOs allow the British authoritie­s to freeze and recover property if individual­s are unable to explain how they acquired assets in excess of £50,000.

Wallace said that a lawmaker from a country where MPs do not receive big salaries, who suddenly buys a luxury townhouse in central London, would have to prove how they paid for it.

“We will seize that asset, we will dispose of it and we will use the proceeds to fund our law enforcemen­t,” he said.

“I have put pressure on the law enforcemen­t agencies to use them (UWOs) soon.”-

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