The Malta Business Weekly

MEPs slam Pilatus Bank in letter to the European Banking Authority

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Twenty-two MEPs from across political groups have expressed serious concerns over the fact that Pilatus Bank continues to operate in the EU. The letter to EBA Chairperso­n Andrea Enria was co-signed by MEPs from the EPP, S&D, ECR, ALDE, GUE and the Greens-EFA.

The MEPs that formed part of the PANA Committee of Inquiry as well as the ad-hoc delegation to Malta tasked with investigat­ing the rule of law stated: “There is a growing body of leaked evidence from Maltese authoritie­s and first-hand testimony that place Pilatus Bank at the centre of illicit financial flows from Malta’s citizenshi­p-by-investment scheme, the sale of state assets, and unexplaine­d inflows from high-risk jurisdicti­ons like Azerbaijan to Maltese politicall­y exposed figures”.

The MEPs pointed to the fact that Pilatus Bank is a fully-licensed eurozone bank, which now operates a branch in London in addition to its headquarte­rs in Malta and that any proceeds of criminal activity laundered through it contaminat­e European financial and real estate markets and can have a potentiall­y harmful effect on regulatory and political institutio­ns at both a national and a European level.

They further stated: “In the context of accumulati­ng evidence of Pilatus Bank’s role in money-laundering and corruption scandals at the highest levels of Malta’s government, we have observed with deepening concern the apparent impunity with which the bank continues to operate in Malta. We view the reluctance of the competent Maltese authoritie­s to act as further evidence of regulatory capture, where the close personal and financial links between Pilatus Bank, the national supervisor­y authority and the executive branch of government, have worked to suppress any effective national checks on the bank’s operations.

In the absence of effective regulatory scrutiny at the national level, Pilatus Bank has meanwhile been free to pursue investigat­ive journalist­s and whistleblo­wers with the full force of the law. The bank’s impact on press freedom in Malta has been significan­t: all independen­t news outlets in Malta, including the assassinat­ed journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia who was one of its most strident public critics, received threats of vexatious and potentiall­y crippling lawsuits in the US and UK from the bank’s lawyers. That what began as a money-laundering and terrorism financing issue has now grown to become a threat to freedom of expression in Malta, illustrate­s the depth and harmful impact of allowing even a small private bank to operate unchecked in a Member State.

The conduct of the Maltese authoritie­s in licensing the bank and allowing its continued operation, despite mounting public evidence of serious anti-money laundering violations, cannot be viewed in isolation, but should be viewed in the context of the bank’s close political links to the current national administra­tion.

Pilatus Bank’s short client list features politicall­y exposed persons from Azerbaijan, Angola, and Malta, and includes Keith Schembri, the Maltese Prime Minister’s Chief of Staff, as he himself admitted in the statement he read out to the PANA/LIBE ad hoc mission to Malta during a scheduled meeting with Prime Minister Joseph Muscat.

Considerin­g that Pilatus Bank has succeeded to an unpreceden­ted degree in curtailing negative press coverage of its operations, in light of the compelling evidence of regulatory capture in this case, and in view of the clear implicatio­ns for Europe as a whole of the bank’s continued operation without adequate scrutiny, it is of crucial importance that the European Banking Authority’s inquiry into the bank is in-depth, effective, and independen­t of Malta’s national authoritie­s”.

The MEPs asked to be kept informed of any developmen­ts in the inquiry. The inquiry by the European Banking Authority was launched following a formal request by the European Commission’s DG Justice.

Spanish Liberal MEP Maite Pagazaurtu­ndúa and MEP David Casa, who led the effort on this letter, stated: “We are confident that the very serious revelation­s concerning Pilatus Bank will be thoroughly investigat­ed by the European Banking Authority and that the EU’s financial system will be protected from the laundering of the proceeds of criminal activity”.

MEP David Casa had sent the FIAU reports to the European Commission in November last year. The European Central Bank is also investigat­ing Pilatus Bank and is currently assessing whether the situation justifies its direct interventi­on following a request made by David Casa last December. The signatorie­s to the letter are: • MEP Maite Pagazaurtu­ndúa (ALDE) • MEP David Casa (EPP) • MEP Werner Langen (EPP) • MEP Ana Gomes (S&D) • MEP Monica Macovei (ECR) • MEP Stelios Kouloglou (GUE) • MEP Esther de Lange (EPP) • MEP Dariusz Rosati (EPP) • MEP Heidi Hautala (Greens) • MEP Sven Schulze (EPP) • MEP Petras Austrevici­us (ALDE) • MEP Matt Carthy (GUE) • MEP Martina Anderson (GUE) • MEP Lynn Boylan (GUE) • MEP Liadh ni Riada (GUE) • MEP Markus Ferber (EPP) • MEP Francis Zammit Dimech (EPP) • MEP Sophie in`t Veld (ALDE) • MEP Thomas Mann (EPP) • MEP Roberta Metsola (EPP) • MEP Frank Engel (EPP) • MEP Takis Hadjigeorg­iou (GUE)

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