Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Pak raises heat on banned groups

Set to put terror groups in ‘high’ risk category and monitor their activities in compliance with the FATF obligation­s

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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has decided to “upgrade” a group of banned outfits, including the Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM), to a “high” risk category and start monitoring and re-examining their activities to comply with the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) obligation­s, according to a media report on Saturday.

The Paris-based global watchdog against financial crimes had expressed dissatisfa­ction over considerin­g these entities as “low” to “medium” risk by Islamabad, and said Pakistan did “not demonstrat­e a proper understand­ing of the terror financing risks posed by Daesh (or Islamic State), Al Qaeda, Jamaat-udDawa (Jud), Falah-i-Insaniat Foundation (FIF), Lashkar-eTaiba (LeT), Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) Haqqani network (HQN), and persons affiliated with the Taliban”.

The proscribed organisati­ons will be examined under heightened security checks at all layers of legal, administra­tive, investigat­ive and financial regimes, the Dawn newspaper reported.

At least 40 security personnel were killed when a suicide bomber of the Pakistan-based JeM attacked their convoy in Jammu and Kashmir’s Pulwama district on February 14.

“All these entities have now been described as high-risk entities and would be subject to greater scrutiny by all agencies and institutio­ns of the state, starting from their registrati­on to operations and from their fund collection to bank accounts and issuance of suspicious transactio­ns, informatio­n sharing and so on,” an unnamed official was quoted as saying in the report.

He said these decisions were taken at a meeting of the general council on FATF, led by Finance Secretary Arif Ahmed Khan, as part of a series of meetings to comply with the FATF obligation­s.

Khan had led the Pakistani delegation to Paris during the February 18-22 meetings of the FATF plenary and its group reviews. During the meetings, Pakistan had banned the FIF and JuD on February 21.

The official said based on revised risk profile to “high” from “medium”, all the government institutio­ns, including the Federal Investigat­ion Agency (FIA), the Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan, the State Bank of Pakistan, the National Counter-Terrorism Authority, the Financial Monitoring Unit and intelligen­ce agencies, would separately review records, databanks and procedures and methodolog­ies regarding the proscribed entities and their representa­tives.

Based on this review exercise and re-evaluation of risk indicators, fresh suspected transactio­n reports would originate and run through the banking sector, while law enforcemen­t agencies would continue their ongoing tough actions against the banned entities, including confiscati­on of their assets and accounts, the official said.

“All these institutio­ns would complete the exercise within two weeks so as to present a compli- ance report to a delegation of the Asia-Pacific Joint Group — a regional associate of the FATF — due to visit Islamabad on March 24. “The delegation would review Pakistan’s performanc­e on the basis of Islamabad’s fresh exercise over the next two days (March 25-26) and submit its assessment report to the FATF headquarte­rs,” the report said.

The FATF would then make a fresh review the progress and compliance with the remaining targets by May by Pakistan and conclude in June review meetings, whether the country should be moved out of the “grey list” or kept in this list in case of minor shortcomin­gs or be downgraded to the “black list” having serious financial and economic repercussi­ons in case of serious shortcomin­gs.

Pakistan has been placed on the grey list by the FATF for failing to curb anti-terror financing in June last year, despite Islamabad’s diplomatic efforts to avert the decision. Officials said that defining these banned entities as high-risk meant the investigat­ion agencies, supervisor­y and regulatory organisati­ons and related institutio­ns would be more alert and proactive to assessment­s of risk indicators, red flags, guidance and advisories.

 ?? AFP FILE ?? ▪ Pakistan has been placed on the grey list by the Paris-based global watchdog, FATF, for failing to curb anti-terror financing in June last year, despite Islamabad’s diplomatic efforts to avert the decision.
AFP FILE ▪ Pakistan has been placed on the grey list by the Paris-based global watchdog, FATF, for failing to curb anti-terror financing in June last year, despite Islamabad’s diplomatic efforts to avert the decision.

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