Gulf News

Irregulari­ties found at Habib Bank

PAKISTAN CENTRAL BANK FOUND ITS STAFF SKIRTED RULES

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AMiddle East operation of Pakistan’s largest bank displayed “significan­t irregulari­ties” in dealings with politicall­y exposed clients and screening some transactio­ns, according to an inspection by the South Asian nation’s central bank that took place more than a year after the lender was shut out of the US financial system.

The findings are contained in a State Bank of Pakistan report, finalised in the first half of 2019, on Habib Bank Ltd’s operations in the UAE. The inspection was conducted after the Financial Action Task Force, a global watchdog for illicit financial activities, put Pakistan on its monitoring list.

Employees in some of Habib Bank’s UAE branches helped certain customers disguise transactio­ns by issuing pay orders in their own names, while gaps in risk profiling and monitoring reflected an “ineffectiv­e compliance function and compliance culture,” the central bank said. In an earlier draft version of its inspection report, also seen by Bloomberg News, the central bank said UAE staff skirted rules when opening an account for Duduzane Zuma, the son of former South African President Jacob Zuma.

The previous September, New York’s banking regulator fined the Karachi-based bank for weak anti-money-laundering controls and sanctions compliance and ordered it to surrender its licence, effectivel­y removing the lender from the US financial system.

Statement

State Bank of Pakistan said its draft and final inspection reports are confidenti­al and as a result it’s unable to comment “on the veracity of observatio­ns purportedl­y related to inspection reports or inspection process.”

The draft report was prepared soon after an on-site inspection by the central bank. It includes lists of customer accounts that were flagged for allegedly involving various violations by Habib Bank staff. The final report has the same broad conclusion­s but incorporat­es input from the bank, and omits the lists of specific accounts.

The problems in the UAE have since been addressed by a sweeping overhaul that the bank started to roll out in the Middle East and other internatio­nal operations in early 2019, according to Sagheer Mufti, Habib Bank’s chief operating officer. “There were process issues and those process issues pertain to legacy clients and legacy transactio­ns and legacy processes,” Mufti said, responding to questions about the inspection report.

 ?? Bloomberg ?? A Habib Bank Ltd branch in Karachi. Employees in some of Habib Bank’s UAE branches helped certain customers disguise transactio­ns. Picture for illustrati­ve purposes only.
Bloomberg A Habib Bank Ltd branch in Karachi. Employees in some of Habib Bank’s UAE branches helped certain customers disguise transactio­ns. Picture for illustrati­ve purposes only.

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