Gulf Today

Iran’s anti-money laundering law faces challenge

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Tehran: a top iranian constituti­onal body has demanded changes to antimoney laundering measures passed by parliament, state-run media said on Saturday, as Tehran nears a deadline to pass legislatio­n to help it attract investment while facing US sanctions.

Iran has been trying to implement standards set by the Financial Action Task force( fatf ), an inter-government­al organisati­on which underpins regimes combatting money laundering and terrorist inancing. It hopes it will be removed from a blacklist that makes some foreign investors reluctant to deal with it.

In June, FATF said Iran had until October to complete the reforms or face consequenc­es that could further deter investors from the country, which has already been hit by the return of US sanctions.

Hardliners in parliament have opposed legislatio­n aimed at moving towards compliance with FATF standards, arguing it could hamper Iranian inancial support for allies such as Lebanon’s Hizbollah, which the United States has classiied as a terrorist organisati­on.

The Guardian Council, which vets legislatio­n passed by parliament for compliance with the constituti­on, objected to four items in the antimoney laundering amendments and returned the measure to parliament, spokesman Abbas Ali Kadkhodaei was quoted by the judiciary’s news agency Mizan as saying.

Kadkhodaei did not give details of the four items, according to Mizan.

Earlier this month, the Guardian Council approved legal amendments on combating the funding of terrorism.

Supreme leader ayatollah alik ham enei said in June parliament should pass legislatio­n to combat money laundering according to its own criteria.

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