The face-to-face meeting of the
Regional Revenue Group and the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) has shown
concerns regarding the approval of the Bill Against Organised Crime,
operational independency of Financial Information Unit (FIU) and amendment of
Anti-Money Laundering Act.
Though the meeting held in Sydney
hailed Nepal's action plan on improving the legal and procedural environment in
fighting against the flow of dirty money, it showed some concern on the delay
in the approval of the Bill Against Organised Crime — one of the key Bills
among the three — Nepal had long committed to approve, said deputy governor of
the central bank Maha Prasad Adhikari.
Participants were interested in
the process of how the Bill could be approved in the absence of a parliament
and if it was on the government's priority list, he said, adding that the
Nepali team led by finance secretary Krishna Hari Baskota, however, convinced
them that the Bill would be approved at the earliest. Two Bills — Mutual Legal
Assistance Bill and Extradition Bill — were approved through ordinance on June
18 by the President, according to the country's international commitment.
Baskota, on the occasion, briefed
the meeting of the country's effort to amend the Anti-Money Laundering Act and
its draft that is under consultation currently.
Nepal will have an amended
Anti-Money Laundering Act before June 13, the deadline the country has
submitted to the FATF — an inter-governmental policymaking body whose purpose
is to establish international standards and to develop and promote policies,
both at national and international levels, to combat money laundering and the
financing of terrorism — as it is already in the pipeline and also due to
high-level political commitment to address the Anti-Money
Laundering/Counter-Financing of Terrorism (AML/CFT).
Similarly, the operational
independency of FIU and its membership with the Egmont Group of Financial
Intelligence Units were also discussed in the meeting. "Though FIU is
under the central bank, it is a fully independent entity," Adhikari
informed the meeting that further discussed on making FIU fully automated.
The Egmont Group of Financial
Intelligence Units members are connected through a software that helps them
exchange information on the flow of dirty money. "But FIU is still in the
process of acquiring the software from United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime
(UNODC) that helps harmonise the software of all member countries," he
said, adding that Nepal has also requested donors for help in acquiring the
UNODC software that will help mitigate risks when upgrading to a new software.
"FIU's membership of Egmont Group of Financial Intelligence Units has been
delayed due to the lack of the software."
Nepal also presented its 12-point
AML guideline and progress on its fight against money laundering. The next
face-to-face meeting will be held in January — by when the Bill Against
Organised Crime is expected to be approved — and the FATF plenary will be held in
October.
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