The Financial Action Task Force (FATF) is set to put its 'blacklist' of countries deemed uncooperative in the fight against money laundering on hold for at least one year, according to a recent Financial Times report.
The newspaper revealed late last week that as part of an initiative towards greater co-operation with the IMF and the World Bank in a co-ordinated anti-money laundering campaign, the FATF is to refrain from 'naming and shaming' any new countries this year.
Speaking to the FT, Eduardo Aninat, deputy managing director of the IMF revealed that the blacklist will be 'superseded' by 'a universal, co-operative approach'.
The countries which are still deemed to be 'unco-operative' by the FATF (which, as of the June 2002 review included: the Cook Islands, Dominica, Egypt, Grenada, Guatemala, Indonesia, the Marshall Islands, Myanmar, Nauru, Nigeria, Niue, the Philippines, Russia, St Vincent and the Grenadines, and Ukraine) are doubtless hoping that they will be removed from the blacklist before it is superseded.
A comprehensive report on the future of offshore following the various international initiatives, including the FATF's anti-money laundering drive is available in the Tax-News Reports Shop at http://www.tax-news.com/reportshop/
Archive
| Resources | Partners
| Site Map | Links
| Newsletter
Archive | Contact
| RSS Feeds
About | Syndication |
Advertising & Marketing |
Recruitment |
Terms & Conditions |
Privacy
Copyright © 2012 - All Rights Reserved - Tax-News.com
All content provided by BSI Media
IMPORTANT NOTICE: Tax-News.com has taken reasonable care in sourcing and presenting the information contained on this site, but accepts no responsibility for any financial or other loss or damage that may result from its use. In particular, users of the site are advised to take appropriate professional advice before committing themselves to involvement in offshore jurisdictions, offshore trusts or offshore investments.
Write a comment