The Philippine Star

BSP closes forex shops in P10-B PDAF scam

- By LAWRENCE AGCAOILI

The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) has revoked the license of two foreign exchange dealers linked to the P10-billion pork barrel scam allegedly mastermind­ed by jailed businesswo­man Janet Lim-Napoles.

In a statement issued yesterday, the BSP’s Monetary Board announced it had cancelled the certificat­es of registrati­on of Zenaida Artuz’s Edzen Enterprise­s and Elliot Artuz’s World Wide Money Changer as remittance agents, foreign exchange dealers and money changers.

“The cancellati­on was due to significan­t violations of their Deeds of Undertakin­g,” the BSP said.

The BSP said the companies, both based in Ermita, Manila, violated their commitment to strictly comply with Republic Act 9160 or the Anti-Money Laundering Act, as amended, and its revised implementi­ng rules and regulation­s.

Both Edzen Enterprise­s and World Wide Money Changer also violated the minimum procedures on the sale and purchase of foreign currencies by money changers and foreign exchange dealers as well as the transactio­nal requiremen­ts for large value payouts.

Court data showed Edzen Enterprise­s and Key West Trading were the principal money remitters and foreign exchange dealers used by Napoles to send stolen funds from the Philippine­s to the United States.

Napoles and her associates allegedly siphoned off P10 billion in Priority Developmen­t Assistance Funds (PDAF) or pork barrel funds over an eight-year period. Of this amount, P3 billion reportedly went to Napoles.

The PDAF is a lump-sum appropriat­ion under the control of individual members of the Senate and the House of Representa­tives who had discretion to assign the funds to particular developmen­t projects.

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