By
Kazi Mahmood, IOL Southeast Asia Correspondent
KUALA
LUMPUR, October 1 (IslamOnline) - The fight against terror is taking
deeper roots in South East Asia with several countries setting up
fresh agencies to counter terrorism on all fronts, including financial
and economic fronts, news agencies reported on Tuesday.
The
Philippines and Indonesia are next in the list of countries attempting
to create Anti-Money Laundering task forces, though it is not certain
whether they will successfully launch such agencies.
The
intricate nature of money transactions in Thailand, Indonesia and the
Philippines renders the task of officials to near impossibility to
detect whether money deposited or transacted is of terror sources.
Indonesia,
a Central Bank official said on Monday, was on a blacklist of
countries accused of being safe heavens for dirty money. Laundering is
increasingly linked to terrorist organizations such as the Al-Qaedah,
sources said.
The
U.S. and Britain has urged these two countries to scrutinize bank
accounts supposedly linked to terror movements or to Osama Bin Laden,
the sources told IslamOnline, however Indonesia is yet to establish
such a task force.
The
Philippines has already voted anti-Laundering laws but are still in
the process of deciphering whether terror money is stashed in its
banks. There is a lot of confusion on this issue in Manila since
several Arab businessmen have huge deposits in certain banks in the
country.
In
Thailand the same situation arises though the country has strict
guidelines on monetary deposits from abroad. However due to the nature
of the banking system in Bangkok, foreigners are allowed to transact
in huge amount of funds and deposits from Middle Eastern individuals
can amount to several million.
In
Paris Financial Action Task Forces (FATF), an International task force
against money laundering urged Indonesia to establish a local task
force which would allow it to verify accounts suspected of being of
terror origins or of having money laundering sources, the Jakarta Post
said on Tuesday.
Bank
Indonesia deputy director Yunus Husein said to the Post that Indonesia
was still not cooperating with the world's anti-money laundering
drive.
Yunus
indicated though that Indonesia, which is desperately trying to
restore foreign investor confidence, had made significant progress in
the anti-money laundering drive.
It
had successfully passed an anti-money laundering law, welcomed by the
international community, though it came under fire for rejecting
accusations from the U.S. media that it was “harboring” terror
money.
Last
August Bank Indonesia swiftly embarked on tighter banking supervision
and found 40 financial transactions at seven banks, which were
allegedly connected with money laundering.
Husein
said the steps were not enough to restore foreign confidence and
remove Indonesia from the blacklist.
In
Malaysia, the country’s Central Bank the Bank Negara ordered all the
local banks and international banks in the country to check their
records to detect any illegal transactions linked to terror
organizations or money laundering.
Malaysia’s
offshore center, Labuan, has also been scrutinized in the process, an
official in Kuala Lumpur said. The official, working for a foreign
bank in the city said no terror accounts were found in Malaysia.
Malaysian
Prime Minister Mohamad Mahathir earlier this year said the Malaysian
banking system was “terror” free and there was no money laundering
in Malaysia, much to the displeasure of US and British officials who
expected to find “terror” links in the country.
Earlier
this year, U.S. officials sent a list of suspected companies and
account numbers to the Malaysian government for a thorough check and
this too did not give the result they expected, the official said.
In
Jakarta, Husein said the establishment of the anti-money laundering
agency, to be called the Financial Transaction and Report Analysis
Center (PPATK), would be a focal point before Indonesia could be
removed from the blacklist.
The
agency would be of high importance as it would be in charge of
analyzing and investigating reported suspicious transactions, as well
as individuals and financial institutions which failed to report
suspicious financial transactions.
FATF
is vested with power to take steps against governments accused of
harboring “black money”. The FATF warns multinational corporations
from doing business in those countries and forcing banks to collect
detailed information before conducting transactions with individuals
or companies in those countries