<b>Banks enlisted for war on terrorism</b>
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<b>Banks enlisted for war on terrorism</b>

Headline: Banks enlisted for war on terrorism
Source: Euromoney
Date: November 2001
Author: Nick Kochan

Washington’s pressure on banks to crack down on illicit money will impel fearful bankers into still tougher surveillance. To the tangle of checks on money laundering and flows to tax havens must now be added the hunt for often legal money flowing to what are deemed illicit activities. Banks face a huge reputational risk. But the extent to which they can take on policing roles and take initiatives to avert crime remains highly contentious. Neither the technology nor systems exist to make tracing tainted cash straightforward. So is the ultimate answer creating more vigilant, yet less commercial, corporate cultures?

       
Bush: putting banks worldwide on notice
When he unveiled his executive order on terrorist financing on September 24, president George W Bush described certain of the powers as “draconian”. The order will enable the US to freeze, or possibly even to seize, the US assets of any bank that has had dealings with named terrorists. Follow-up legislation passing through Congress would impose mandates on banks to scrutinize customers and report suspicious activity.






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