The Malta Independent on Sunday

Money laundering issues again linked with Malta’s passport scheme

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An Associated Press report has once again linked Malta’s passport scheme with money laundering issues.

In a report mostly dealing with Latvia in the wake of US sanctions, Malta is mentioned as being a country used for money laundering purposes. The selling of passport is specifical­ly mentioned.

When the US hit North Korea with sanctions last year, Pyongyang’s state-owned banks found a quiet backchanne­l to keep money flowing to the country’s ballistic missile programmes, the US says – the tiny European country of Latvia.

One of the biggest banks in Latvia – a member country of the European Union and NATO – built a business from processing illegal money transfers, enabling North Korea to continue to procure missiles, the US government says.

Latvia has come into focus as a potential weak link in the West’s banking system as the US and EU increasing­ly rely on financial sanctions as a weapon in their diplomatic spats – with North Korea, but also Russia and Syria, among others. After a slew of accusation­s of high-level corruption, Latvia is now trying to appease its US and European allies and drasticall­y reform its financial sector.

Prime Minister Maris Kucinskis told The Associated Press in an interview that the tiny Baltic state “cannot afford to have any uncontroll­ed money flows from the countries which have to be constantly monitored in order to avoid meddling or influence“.

In February, the US accused one of Latvia’s biggest banks, ABLV, of proactivel­y laundering money, skirting sanctions, and bribing local officials to do so. ABLV denied the accusation­s, but the US report caused a run on the bank, which collapsed within days.

That same week, Latvian authoritie­s said their central bank chief, Ilmars Rimsevics, was suspected of taking bribes. Security services are also investigat­ing him after an AP report containing allegation­s he asked a Latvian bank to launder money from Russia.

Latvia has strong business ties to Russia, and a third of its population is ethnically Russian. Since the 1990s, it has sought to become a “Switzerlan­d on the Baltic” by offering financial services to foreigners, often shell companies.

That made it a convenient conduit for dirty money into the EU. Several small EU countries, like Cyprus and Malta, also have been accused of being used for money laundering. But the scale of Latvia’s problem was made clear by reports in recent years detailing how billions of dollars flowed through the country.

To solve the issue, Latvia says it will ban banks from doing business with shell companies, which can be used to mask wrongdoers’ identities. In the case of ABLV, the US says North Korea used shell companies.

The country also aims to reduce the amount of foreign deposits its banks hold from 40 per cent of the total to 5 per cent this year.

In 2015, Latvian banks held 12 billion euros in foreign deposits, worth almost half the economy. By the end of 2017, that had fallen to 8 billion euros. About half are owned by 26,000 shell companies, regulators estimate.

Experts are cautious about the probabilit­y of success.

Eriks Selga, a researcher with the Foreign Policy Research Institute, called the efforts the most ambitious Latvia has attempted by far but said the key will be implementa­tion.

“We have some of the highest quality anti-money-laundering laws in Europe, if not the world. But the enforcemen­t is just not there,” Selga said.

Latvian authoritie­s investigat­e only about one per cent of reports of suspicious transactio­ns, compared with an EU average of 10 per cent, according to official records.

Selga’s scepticism was shared by the owner of Latvian bank Norvik, which holds many accounts by non-Latvians. Grigory Guselnikov said the kind of money laundering that took place in Latvia in recent years is “not possible without regulator involvemen­t“.

Guselnikov said Rimsevics regularly asked for bribes and demanded he launder $100 million from Russia – allegation­s Rimsevics rejects.

Meanwhile, a photo obtained by the AP shows Rimsevics on vacation in 2010 in the company of the head of a Russian military company now sanctioned by the US, as well as a Latvian businessma­n, Jurijs Simonenkov­s, who owned a bank that was sanctioned by the US for money laundering in 2005.

Rimsevics said he knows nobody in the photos, but Latvian secret services are investigat­ing his links to Russia.

He has been banned from doing his job, including at the powerful European Central Bank, where he sits on the top policymaki­ng board. But he has refused to resign and can be removed only if charged with a crime.

Further illustrati­ng Latvia’s challenge is that the official in charge of detailing to the US how Latvia is fighting financial crime has a history of working for banks that engaged in money laundering.

Arnis Lagzdins worked for Latvia’s Parex bank before its collapse in 2008 and for Lithuania’s Ukio bank before its demise in 2013. In both cases, he was in charge of ensuring the banks followed anti-money-laundering rules. Lagzdins declined requests for comment.

The US Treasury will send officials to Latvia this summer to evaluate its progress. But the risk is that the dirty money might flow elsewhere.

Money laundering is cited as a growing problem in other EU states, like Malta, which gives citizenshi­p to foreigners willing to invest €650,000 ($750,000). Russian and Arab names featured heavily on the list of new citizens last year.

“Money laundering is going to drift somewhere else,” Selga said. “From what I understand, it’s happening already to a large part.”

 ??  ?? Latvia’s Prime Minister Maris Kucinskis
Latvia’s Prime Minister Maris Kucinskis

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