Anti-money laundering rules under scrutiny
The independent Financial Action Task Force (FATF)
has welcomed Switzerland's efforts to combat money laundering. In its latest
review the FATF acknowledged Switzerland's cooperation, but criticised
legal loopholes and the slow implementation of international recommendations.
The third report of the Paris-based organisation
gives Switzerland generally good marks, according to Alex Karrer, who heads
the Swiss delegation at the FATF. He said the experts praised Switzerland
for its cooperation on an international level in the fight against money
laundering, and for the way it pursues criminal offenders.
But Switzerland came in for criticism over perceived
loopholes, because Swiss law does not consider smuggling, insider dealings
and human trafficking as crimes in the context of money laundering. Karrer
added that the inter-governmental body pointed out that transparency rules
for so-called bearer shares were not sufficient and that the country was
too slow in implementing recommendations on cross-border cash payments.
Legal amendment
Karrer said the Swiss cabinet had addressed most
of the points in a proposed amendment to the law against money laundering
earlier this year. However, the banking industry and centre-right parties
have slammed the plans to tighten the law as too bureaucratic.
The head of the Swiss delegation also dismissed
criticism over the application of the "know-your customer" rule and the
perceived inefficiency of the reporting system of Swiss banks.
Karrer stressed that Switzerland welcomed the FATF
report, but did not elaborate on the possible impact on the proposed legal
amendments. He added that the international experts had been more strict
and detailed in their latest assessment.
Banks
In a similar vein, the Swiss banking industry welcomed
the report which is addressed to the Swiss government. "Swiss banks are
pleased that the FATF acknowledges the fundamental soundness of Switzerland's
anti-money laundering arsenal and the pioneering work Switzerland has carried
out in this area," Swiss Bankers Association spokesman James Nason told
swissinfo.
"While we are indeed grateful to the FATF for suggesting
areas for potential improvement, we believe many of the critical points
made in the report are a logical consequence of the rigidly formalistic
methodology used for the assessment," he added.
Audit
In a related development, the Swiss banking regulator
says banks and securities dealers are adequately implementing the latest
anti-money laundering rules, that came into effect in 2003.
In a statement published on Wednesday the Swiss
Federal Banking Commission found that there were still some deficiencies
at some institutions, notably too restrictive risk definitions and inadequate
training concepts. But they affected only 0.1 per cent of the business
relationships, the commission said.
A total of 405 banks, 450 Raiffeisen banks and 69
securities dealers and their more than 26 million business relationships
were covered by the implementation audit.
swissinfo with agencies