Mindanao Times

BOC told: Partner with AMLC on foreign cash

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FINANCE Secretary Carlos Dominguez has directed the Bureau of Customs (BOC) to closely coordinate with the Anti-Money Laundering Council (AMLC) in investigat­ing attempts by suspected syndicates to bring in large sums of foreign currency into the country.

Dominguez issued the order after receiving a written report from Customs Commission­er Rey Leonardo Guerrero about several attempts by individual­s and groups to sneak in large amounts of US dollars and other foreign currency into the country using travelers arriving at the Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport (NAIA).

Guerrero said that last year, an estimated $370 milIn

lion or around P18.74 billion were brought into the country by two groups, identified in his report as the “Rodriguez” and the “Chinese” groups.

The BOC chief recommende­d to Dominguez the creation of an interagenc­y body to keep tabs on the inflow of foreign currency into the country via the country’s ports of entry, and to recommend measures to deter the use of these funds for illegal activities.

Through backtracki­ng and the intensifie­d monitoring activities of the BOC’s Intelligen­ce Group, Guerrero said the bureau learned that foreign currencies brought in by the Rodriguez Group through the NAIA amounted to about $200.24 million or around P10.18 billion; while the Chinese group was able to sneak in $167.97 million, equivalent to about P8.54 billion.

Guerrero said the BOC also informed members of the Congress about this concern, “as possible basis of policy changes on the protocol to be observed regarding hand-carried foreign currencies passing through our airports.”

The AMLC and the National Intelligen­ce Coordinati­ng Agency (NICA) were also apprised by the BOC of this unusual influx of foreign currencies, he said.

“Given the global threat of terrorism, organized crimes, money laundering and the possibilit­y that such foreign currencies find their way to such unlawful activities, it is respectful­ly recommende­d that an interagenc­y body be establishe­d through a presidenti­al directive, purposedly organized to monitor the continuous inflow of foreign currencies by individual couriers, profile the personalit­ies involved and the recipient thereof, and recommend measures to ensure that such sums of money will not be used in any illegal trade or activities,” Guerrero said in his report.

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