Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Pakistan may be put on FATF watchlist in June

- Bloomberg letters@hindustant­imes.com CONTINUED ON P 6

ISLAMABAD/KARACHI: Pakistan will be placed back onto an internatio­nal terrorism-financing watchlist from June, according to a person with direct knowledge of the matter, a move that may hinder the country’s access to financial markets.

The move follows a push from the US, UK, France and Germany to get Pakistan placed on the Financial Action Task Force’s “grey” monitoring list during a review meeting in Paris this week.

China, which is financing more than $50 billion of infrastruc­ture projects across Pakistan, removed its earlier objections to the move, said the person, who asked not to be identified as the discussion­s are private.

Saudi Arabia too removed its objections, while Turkey alone backed Pakistan, a person familiar with the matter told Hindustan Times.

Pakistan’s benchmark stock index reversed earlier gains and fell 0.6% at the close in Karachi.

A statement from FATF after the Paris meeting on Friday made no mention of Pakistan. Technicall­y, the South Asian nation has three months to con-

It could endanger Pakistan's handful of remaining banking links to the outside world

Cost of doing business will increase and foreign investment may dry up

Ahead of the FATF meet, Pakistan changed its laws to proscribe terror entities identified by UN Security Council resolution­s

It has since frozen and taken over some assets of Mumbai terror attack mastermind

Jamaat-ud-dawa (JUD) and related charity Falah-e-insaniyat Foundation (FIF) vince the body that it has acted against terror organisati­ons, though it will be difficult for them in practice, the person said. Earlier this week, foreign minister Khawaja Muhammad Asif said no consensus had been reached to put Pakistan on the list and that the nation had been given a three-month “pause.” Officials at Pakistan’s finance ministry couldn’t immediatel­y comment.

The financial consequenc­es would not kick in until June, which, in theory, could allow Pakistan time to fix financing issues

The move is the latest attempt to get Islamabad to take more action against terror groups that allegedly have support and sanctuary within Pakistan.

Relations with the US have deteriorat­ed drasticall­y in the past year and in his first tweet of 2018, President Donald Trump said Pakistan gave “lies and deceit” in return for American funding.

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