The Pak Banker

Pakistan criticizes continued inclusion on FATF gray list

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Pakistan has decried an internatio­nal money watchdog's decision to keep the country on its gray list, insisting there is no justificat­ion for the move.

"We have to decide whether the FATF (Financial Action Task Force) is a technical forum or a political (one). We have to see whether or not the forum is being used to serve political motives," Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi said in a statement.

Announcing the decision, FATF head Marcus Pleyer said Pakistan has made "significan­t" progress on 26 points of the watchdog's 27-point action plan for the South Asian country.

However, he added one "key issue" of the action plan still needs to be completed, namely the investigat­ion and prosecutio­n of senior leaders of UN-designated terror groups.

He was referring to militant groups such as Jamaat ud Dawah (JuD), and Jaishe-Mohammad (JeM), which have already been outlawed by the UN and Pakistan.

But Qureshi argued that the watchdog itself has "acknowledg­ed that 26 out of 27 points have been implemente­d, whereas progress has also been made on the remaining one point."

Qureshi pointed the finger at "some powers" who want Pakistan to stay on the gray list, a slightly veiled reference to the US, which some analysts say uses its influence over the 36-nation money-laundering watchdog as leverage to pressure Islamabad, mainly on the issue of neighborin­g Afghanista­n.

The US was among the countries that voted to keep Pakistan on the gray list.

"Anti-terrorism and anti-money laundering steps are in Pakistan's own interest, which we will continue to take," FM Qureshi said.

Islamabad has been on the global money-laundering watchdog's radar since June 2018, when it was placed on its gray list for terrorist financing and money laundering risks after an assessment of the country's financial system and security mechanism.

The South Asian nuclear nation has since thrice escaped being placed on the watchdog's financial crime blacklist with the support of Turkey, China, and Malaysia.

According to the FATF charter, a country must have the support of at least three member states to avoid blacklisti­ng.

In recent years, Islamabad has taken some major steps under the plan, including strict checks on opening new bank accounts and banning foreign currency transactio­ns without a national tax number, and currency changes of up to $500 in the open market without proper identifica­tion.

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