Arab Times

Latvia rocked by US probe, cenbank chief’s detention

ABLV accused of sanctions busting

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RIGA, Feb 19, (RTRS): Latvia’s third-biggest bank sought emergency financial support on Monday after US officials accused it of helping breach North Korean sanctions, hours after the central bank governor was arrested over separate bribery allegation­s.

The financial sector in Latvia, a small euro zone state that shares a border with Russia, has come under wider scrutiny for being a conduit for illicit financial activities.

ABLV Bank was ordered by the European Central Bank to stop all payments as its liquidity position had deteriorat­ed sharply since the US Treasury accused it of allowing clients to conduct business with North Korea.

The Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcemen­t Network (FCEN) said bank executives and management had bribed Latvian officials to cover up their activities.

“ABLV has institutio­nalized money laundering as a pillar of the bank’s business practices,” the FCEN said in a statement linking some of the alleged activities to North Korea’s ballistic missiles program.

The bank has said the US accusation­s were based on unfounded and misleading informatio­n.

The Latvian central bank said it had agreed to provide 97.5 million euros worth of funding to ABLV but the bank had yet to receive the money.

ABLV said it had ample collateral so was not seeking a bailout, just temporary liquidity support.

The bank will hold a news conference at 1500 GMT.

Gained

The economy in Latvia, which gained independen­ce from the Soviet Union in 1991, has boomed in recent years. Its commercial banking sector is dominated by Nordic banks alongside a number of privately-owned local lenders.

In its document detailing the allegation­s against ABLV, the FCEN said the reliance of the Latvian banking system on non-resident deposits for capital exposed it to increased illicit finance risk. It said such deposits amounted to roughly $13 billion.

“Non-resident banking in Latvia allows offshore companies, including shell companies, to hold accounts and transact through Latvian banks,” it said, adding criminal groups and corrupt officials may use such schemes to hide true beneficiar­ies or create fraudulent business transactio­ns.

“(Former Soviet Union) actors often transfer their capital via Latvia, frequently through complex and interconne­cted legal structures, to various banking locales in order to reduce scrutiny of transactio­ns and lower the transactio­ns’ risk rating.”

In a separate developmen­t, Latvia’s anti-corruption authority said it had detained central bank governor Ilmars Rimsevics, an ECB policymake­r, over the weekend for demanding a bribe.

Connected

It said its investigat­ion was not connected to the probe into ABLV.

“(Rimsevics’ arrest)... is about demanding a bribe of no less than 100,000 euros,” Jekabs Straume, the head of Latvia’s Corruption Prevention and Combating Bureau told reporters at a news conference.

Rimsevics’ lawyer said the central bank governor rejected the allegation­s made by the anticorrup­tion authority.

“But they (the allegation­s) have been expressed only orally, so we have not seen a specific document at the moment,” Saulvedis Varpins said.

Neither the police nor the anticorrup­tion authority gave details of the alleged request for a bribe.

Latvia’s government increased pressure on the central bank boss to quit.

“I can’t imagine that a governor of the Bank of Latvia detained over such a serious accusation could work,” Prime Minister Maris Kucinskis said on Monday.

After joining the European Union in 2003, Latvia adopted the euro as its currency at the start of 2014, a move which gave its central bank governor a seat on the currency bloc’s top policymaki­ng council.

Rimsevics was arrested on Saturday after police searched his office and home. He can be held for 48 hours, a period which is due to expire late on Monday.

The European Commission said on Monday that Rimsevics’ detention was a matter for Latvian authoritie­s.

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