The Borneo Post

Saudi hopes purge will help push to join antiillici­t funding body

-

DUBAI: Saudi Arabia has high hopes that a campaign of arrests to crack down on corruption will improve its chances of joining the Financial Action Task Force ( FATF), a global body dedicated to combatting illicit money flows.

The kingdom, one of only two G20 nations along with Indonesia which is not a FATF member, has tried for years to shake off a reputation as a breeding ground for corruption and terror financing.

Its last attempt to join the intergover­nmental body, which has 37 members, was unsuccessf­ul in 2010 and some lobbyists may oppose the new Saudi push before an expected vote mid next year.

But achieving membership offers the possibilit­y of strengthen­ing Riyadh’s internatio­nal standing at a time when it wants foreign investors to back its multibilli­on dollar transforma­tion plan, as well as improving global financial ties for its banks.

Spearheade­d by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the kingdom detained dozens of senior business people and government officials last month, accusing them of crimes including money laundering although not of terror financing. Political analysts say the future king has also tried to tighten his grip on power through the purge.

The crackdown – which involved the freezing of more than 2,000 bank accounts and liaising with central banks in among others Switzerlan­d, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates - stress- tested the Saudi anti- money laundering system and found it largely effective, say sources familiar with the matter.

The system will undergo further tests in the coming weeks as Saudi Arabia targets around 100 billion of settlement­s with some of those detained. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Prince Mohammed attends the Future Investment Initiative conference in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Saudi Arabia has high hopes that a campaign of arrests to crack down on corruption will improve its chances of joining the FATF, a global body dedicated to...
Prince Mohammed attends the Future Investment Initiative conference in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Saudi Arabia has high hopes that a campaign of arrests to crack down on corruption will improve its chances of joining the FATF, a global body dedicated to...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia