Panay News

Philippine­s aims to include casinos in dirty money law

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MANILA - The Philippine­s could tighten its money laundering law this year to cover casinos, its top lawmaker said on Monday, in a move aimed at plugging loopholes that allowed $81 million stolen from Bangladesh to pass through Manila gaming venues.

The Senate aims to approve its version of the bill in May and it is likely the lower house of Congress would hold separate discussion­s on its version around the same time, said Senate President Aquilino Pimentel.

Apart from strict enforcemen­t of a “know- your-customer rule,” casinos would, under the proposed amendment, be required to report to the country’s anti-money laundering body accumulate­d bets within a 24- hour period totaling P3 million ($60,000), he said.

The review of the existing law comes after a breach l ast year of Bangladesh Bank’s systems and use of SWIFT messaging network to request nearly $ 1 billion from its account at the New York Federal Reserve in early February.

The branch of the US central bank rejected most of the requests, but $81 million disappeare­d into casinos and other entities in the Philippine­s.

“The pending bill is one of the products of the (senate) investigat­ion,” Pimentel told reporters, referring to the inquiry it conducted last year into the stolen Bangladesh central bank money.

The exclusion of casinos from the current scope of the anti-money laundering laws and a strict bank secrecy law have made it difficult for authoritie­s to track the Bangladesh money trail and identify the perpetrato­rs.

Bangladesh’s central bank has retrieved just under a fifth of the stolen funds.

The plan is for President Rodrigo Duterte to sign the measure into law this year, Pimentel said.

Duterte has expressed frustratio­n at the country’s anti-money laundering body for lack of progress in tracking the proceeds of illegal drugs traffickin­g, a task made more difficult by its tough bank secrecy laws.

Amending the law had been an uphill battle because of fierce lobbying by t he gaming industry, according to lawmakers.

Casinos last year raked in P149 billion in gross gaming revenue, data f rom t he gaming regulator showed.

Pimentel also said the Senate would not close its doors to reopening the investigat­ion into the heist, given t hat only a small amount had been recovered.

Asked whether t he revelation by US Federal Bureau of I nvestigati­on t hat North Korea was responsibl­e could compel lawmakers to revive the probe, Pimentel said: “Allow us to process the i nformation first.”

 ?? ECONOMICTI­MES.COM ?? The Philippine­s is aiming to include casinos in its dirty money law.
ECONOMICTI­MES.COM The Philippine­s is aiming to include casinos in its dirty money law.

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