Philippine Daily Inquirer

AMLC FIRMS UP TIES WITH REGIONAL PEERS VS LAUNDERING

- By Daxim L. Lucas @daxinq

The Anti-money Laundering Council (AMLC) will work closely with its foreign counterpar­ts to be able to better combat terrorist financing and money laundering, the head of the country’s main financial intelligen­ce unit said.

AMLC chair and Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Governor Benjamin Diokno said the fifth Counter-terrorism Financing Summit that began on Tuesday in Manila brought together leaders in financial intelligen­ce along with senior representa­tives from regulatory, national security, law enforcemen­t, industry and academia from across the region and the world.

“Fighting terrorism means teamwork among local and internatio­nal stakeholde­rs,” Diokno said. “It is through avenues of sharing and potential collaborat­ion across all sectors concerned that we are able to synergize our efforts and, ultimately, rethink our strategies in beating terrorists and their financiers at their own game.”

Hosted by AMLC in partnershi­p with the summit’s co-founders, the Indonesian financial intelligen­ce unit (PPATK) and Australia’s financial intelligen­ce agency (Austrac), the conference aims to identify and share counter-terrorism financing strategies between countries in the region; address regional high-risk money laundering threats; provide operationa­l guidance to counterpar­ts and private sector on digital currencies and virtual assets,; and present the outcomes from the pilot of secure informatio­n sharing platform to allow real-time intelligen­ce sharing and collaborat­ion between regional financial intelligen­ce bodies.

Diokno said the summit would also expand its scope beyond countering terrorist financing and consider ways to address significan­t regional threats such as the abuse of new financial technologi­es, corruption in the region as well as victim-based crimes such as human and wildlife traffickin­g and child sex exploitati­on.

The AMLC chief also noted that the summit’s discourse has gone beyond its name to include money laundering and other offenses as the terrain of financial crime grows.

Austrac CEO Nicole

Rose said the CTF Summit had evolved into a globally recognized example of multilater­al cooperatio­n focused on terrorist financing and serious transnatio­nal crime.

“Terrorist and organized crime groups are increasing­ly sophistica­ted internatio­nal organizati­ons and it is essential that we unite as a region to combat these threats together,” Rose said. “The summit continues to facilitate important regional initiative­s and cooperatio­n and trust between financial intelligen­ce units in the region has never been stronger.”

PPATK head Kiagus Ahmad Badaruddin highlighte­d the summit’s role as a forum that facilitate­s new ideas and firm commitment­s to collaborat­ively address money laundering and terrorist financing in the region.

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