Botswana Guardian

Botswana assesses its money laundering, terrorist financing

... to avoid greylistin­g

- Andrew Maramwidze BG Correspond­ent

The government has launched the second National Risk Assessment ( NRA) for the country’s financial system.

This is in line with the internatio­nal standards set by the Financial Action Task Force ( FATF), to detect emerging threats to resilience and stability as the nation proactivel­y moves away from potential greylistin­g.

Last year, FATF removed Botswana from its grey list of jurisdicti­ons. FATF is an inter- government­al body mandated to set standards for prevention and combating of money laundering ( ML), terrorist financing ( TF) and proliferat­ion financing ( PF).

Launching the NRA - a 12 months exercise that commenced in September and is due next year August - Permanent Secretary to the President, Emmah Peloetlets­e said the risk assessment will assist to effectivel­y implement the internatio­nal standards to avoid finding the country on the grey list again.

“We need no reminder of some of the difficulti­es our country went through due to greylistin­g,” Peloetlets­e said, citing delays in external payments due to enhanced due diligence imposed on all financial transactio­ns.

She also bemoaned that the local economy suffered fewer to no foreign direct investors due to low business confidence, while the country’s trading competitiv­e advantage was negatively affected.

Peloetlets­e implored all stakeholde­rs to double efforts and invest resources on NRA, citing that the local economy can only thrive in an environmen­t free from money laundering and terrorism financing.

The PS said the risk assessment is a precursor to the next Mutual Evaluation which is tentativel­y set for 2024/ 25. According to Peloetlets­e the first NRA was launched on the 4th of March 2015 and the team used data covering a fiveyear period from 2010 to 2014 and completed the assessment in 2017, mostly led by World Bank staff.

“This time around we believe that we have built enough capacity internally to do the assessment ourselves. However, we wish to acknowledg­e the World Bank for training our officers on the new NRA modules,” she said.

Peloetlets­e is confident that the team nominated to undertake the assignment will deliver the report on time and within budget.

“I therefore urge citizens and residents including the AML/ CFT fraternity to give support to the team.” For the second NRA, the assessment modules have increased from nine to 15.

“Changes and developmen­ts in the global financial landscape calls for commensura­te interventi­ons. In this regard the FATF is continuous­ly effecting changes in the anti- money laundering standards to ensure that jurisdicti­ons are not caught unaware by the changes but are able to apply risk based supervisor­y measures.”

Meanwhile NRA Lead Consultant, Susan Mangori said the assessment will put the spotlight on national threats and vulnerabil­ities and what the country has in place, as mitigation measures.

“It is critical that as we go through this process honesty is important,” Mangori said citing that high vulnerabil­ity areas should be exposed so that “we can be able to have prioritise­d plans.”

Some of the modules the NRA will use include money laundering threats, national vulnerabil­ity of legal frameworks, banking vulnerabil­ity, insurance sector vulnerabil­ity, terrorism financing, financial inclusion product assessment, environmen­tal and natural resources crimes, tax crimes, non- profit organisati­on risks, virtual assets and virtual assets service providers and the legal persons, legal arrangemen­ts and beneficial ownership modules.

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