
Jamaican agencies urged to put anti money laundering measures in place
Thursday, July 1, 2004
KINGSTON, Jamaica: Executive Director of the
Jamaican Financial Services Commission (FSC), Brian Wynter, has urged agencies
in the financial sector to put appropriate anti money laundering measures in
place, or risk being prosecuted for breaches of the Anti Money Laundering Act.
“The importance of having appropriate systems in place, which are effectively
implemented and maintained, cannot be over-emphasized,” Mr. Wynter said.
As a competent authority under the Money Laundering Act, the FSC has the
responsibility to advise, supervise and provide guidance to regulated entities
in the securities and insurance industries in their responsibilities under the
Act and Regulations. Mr. Wynter said the FSC
has been proceeding with a programme, which involved the development of a
regulatory regime, the establishment and maintenance of anti money laundering
and anti fraud protocols, and the development and implementation of monitoring
and enforcement mechanisms.
In developing the regulatory regime,
consideration has been given to existing legislation, the 40 recommendations
of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), International Monetary Fund (IMF)
and World Bank, criteria and guidelines issued by the international regulatory
bodies for securities and insurance.
Mr. Wynter said that even with these
guidelines, it was up to the relevant organizations to make sure that they had
appropriate counter-offensive mechanisms in place, including proper
documentation and code of conduct, operational policies and procedures and
ensuring that staff was properly trained. “If
you take the anti money laundering programme and seek to achieve best
practices …I think you will find that there are indirect benefits to you in
terms of the management of your enterprise and knowledge of your customers,”
he said.
Meanwhile, Nyron Davidson, Financial
Technical Adviser with the Caribbean Anti Laundering Programme (CALP), said
that money laundering was one of the world’s fastest growing crimes, involving
highly organized and sophisticated criminal networks, whose primary objective
was to legitimize ill gotten funds through the financial sector.
Because of their enormous wealth and influence, these criminals have the
potential to corrupt bankers and public officials, thereby threatening the
integrity of the financial and economic systems, governments and society, he
observed. In 1999, it was estimated that
US$600 billion in illicit funds was laundered through the world’s financial
systems, and by 2002, the figure had risen to US$1.3 trillion.
Mr. Davidson said the Caribbean has not been
spared, as with the tightening of controls in Europe and the United States,
the region was seen as a soft spot for laundering. In fact in 1999, it was
estimated that US$50 billion passed through Caribbean institutions.
In addition, a number of countries in the
region have been on the FATF black list as being non-co-operative in the fight
against money laundering. These are Cayman Islands, Bahamas, St. Kitts and
Nevis, Dominica, Grenada and St. Vincent and the Grenadines. By 2003, most of
these countries were removed. The Caribbean
Financial Action Task Force (CFATF) and CALP have been at the centre of the
region’s response to the scourge. Set up in 1990, CFATF is an
inter-governmental organization comprised of 25 Caribbean and Latin American
countries.
CALP was instituted in 1999 through funding
from the European Union and the US State Department and supports the work of
CFATF by designing strategies and mechanisms to fight against money
laundering, including facilitating the investigation and prosecution of money
laundering offences and facilitating the seizure and forfeiture of property
associated with criminal activity.
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