The Borneo Post

Japan tells banks to report suspicious transfers by JVs with N.Korea — Sources

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TOKYO: Japan’s financial regulator has told the country’s banks to report any suspicious money transfers involving 10 Japan-North Korea joint ventures, two people with direct knowledge of the matter said yesterday.

A government official and a manager at a major Japanese bank said the Financial Services Agency (FSA) on Monday told Japanese banks and credit associatio­ns to report such transfers by the joint ventures. Reuters was unable to identify the firms suspected of making such transactio­ns.

The Mainichi newspaper said they included a manufactur­er of pianos and acoustic devices as well as a food sales company.

The FSA declined to comment immediatel­y.

The United Nations Security Council last year passed a resolution banning new joint ventures involving individual­s or groups from North Korea, as well as investment­s in existing enterprise­s. The FSA, concerned that Japan’s lenders are lagging on efforts to stop money laundering and other illicit finance, has been urging banks to step up measures to detect suspicious transactio­ns. — Reuters

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