Offshore Banking Supervisors Gather
by Glen Shapiro, LawAndTax-News.com, New York
07 July 2005
The Offshore Group of Banking Supervisors (OGBS) concluded its 25th annual
meeting in the Cayman Islands last Friday, stressing the importance of international
cooperation over standards and regulatory compliance.
The meeting – attended by representatives from 16 of the 19 OGBS member
jurisdictions – also included representatives of five observer jurisdictions
and delegates from several international organisations concerned with financial
regulation and anti-money laundering/combating the financing of terrorism (AML/CFT).
“We impressed upon international representatives that OGBS will continue
to participate in and be supportive of the work of global standard setters,
to contribute fully to international cooperation that is essential for the successful
pursuit of those engaged in financial crime and to be committed to and compliant
with international standards of financial regulation and AML/CFT,” said
OGBS Chairman Colin Powell. “For our part we are delighted that our high
standards of compliance are increasingly being recognised internationally.”
The meeting focussed on a number of international initiatives to which OGBS
is a party and the discussion covered a wide range of issues including:
- International cooperation, particularly in the pursuit of those engaged
in financial crime;
- International recognition of OGBS members’ compliance with international
standards for financial regulation and AML/CFT;
- The need for a level playing field in the application of international
standards, and
- The need to focus on distinguishing between compliant/non-compliant or
cooperative/non-cooperative jurisdictions and not between offshore/onshore.
The meeting also reviewed regulatory developments in member jurisdictions.
Particular reference was made to the regulation of trust and company service
providers where OGBS members are leaders in both the setting and the effective
implementation of standards for others to follow.
Immediately prior to the meeting, on the 29 June, OGBS members participated
in a seminar organised by the Basel based Financial Stability Institute. The
seminar focussed on the Basel II Capital Adequacy proposals, and the risk based
approach to financial regulation and AML/CFT.
OGBS was formed in October 1980 at the instigation of the Basel Committee on
Banking Supervision. The nineteen members of OGBS are Aruba, Bahamas, Bahrain,
Barbados, Bermuda, Cayman Islands, Cyprus, Gibraltar, Guernsey, Hong Kong China,
Isle of Man, Jersey, Labuan, Macao China, Mauritius, Netherlands Antilles, Panama,
Singapore and Vanuatu. The five observer jurisdictions who attended the meeting
were Antigua & Barbuda, Belize, British Virgin Islands, Cook Islands and
Samoa.
The international organisations represented at the meeting were The Financial
Action Task Force on Money Laundering, The International Organisation of Securities
Commissions, The International Monetary Fund, The Basel Committee on Banking
Supervision and The Financial Stability Institute.
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