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Zimbabwe

Zim gets tough on laundering

2005-04-17 20:01

Special Report

Situation getting out of hand
Situation getting out of hand

A political impasse in Zimbabwe has raised concerns from regional leadership that the situation "could get out of hand".

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Mugabe's view on sanctions

Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe says he doesn't expect the US sanctions on his country to be lifted soon.

Alfonce Mbiwo

Harare - Zimbabwe's stricken economy, once a haven for illicit currency transactions, is looking to tighten the noose on endemic money laundering.

Zimbabwe has enacted a tough law that compels lawyers to act as whistleblowers on their clients by recording, disclosing and reporting information about clients suspected of money laundering in trust accounts they hold on behalf of their clients.

The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe says money laundering has become rampant in the country due to absence of regulations and corruption within the financial sector.

Lawyers in the country say the Bank Use Promotion and Suppression of Money Laundering Act compromises them in upholding legal ethics and confidentiality between lawyers and their clients.

Fact is, lax laws and poor foreign currency inflows have seen the country become a major gateway for money laundering in the region.

According to a 2002 study by the National Economic Consultative Forum (NECF), a Zimbabwean think-tank, money laundering cost the country US$1bn over a six-year period.

The same forum predicted that the country was losing at least US$1m every month to this criminal behaviour, raising alarm about the country's anti-money laundering laws.

Southern Africa haven for launderers

Money laundering has been prevalent in various forms in Southern Africa, notably in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Malawi, South Africa, Botswana and Zimbabwe, for some time.

However, the assault on Zimbabwe started with the currency collapse in 1997, which gave way to trade on the parallel market.

"The inclination of retail businesses in many countries to conduct transactions in cash facilitates the local laundering of funds.

"It is convenient for criminals to purchase commodities without fear that the source of the cash will be detected," noted Charles Goredema of the South Africa-based Institute of Security Studies in a report on money laundering in the region.

Large amounts of cash, some of which are derived from drug trafficking, regularly change hands in the commercial districts of Mozambique and Zimbabwe.

Until the Zimbabwean government banned bureaux de change in November 2002, illegal forex trade was convenient and difficult to trace.

It meant that anyone within the region could move money into Zimbabwe and out without complications. The situation compelled the US to watch Zimbabwe in case it was used to money to fund terrorist activities.

Asset management route

Asset management companies sprouted in 2002 and, with no law binding their operations, they dealt in forex currency.

They soon became targets of regional and international criminals who moved funds into the country under the guise of investments.

They also enabled many Zimbabweans to externalise foreign currency.

According to the NECF, at least US$1bn was externalised by Zimbabweans between 2002 and 2003. Their speculative actions also drove trade on the Zimbabwe Stock Exchange to new heights.

In 2001, three commercial banks were fined by the Reserve Bank for dealing outside the controlled exchange rates but the bottom fell when Gideon Gono took over as governor of the central bank.

His tough stance led to the closure of one of the largest asset management companies, ENG Capital, which left many companies exposed to the tune of Z$115bn.

The fall-out has led to the closure of three other commercial banks, Trust Bank, Barbican Bank and Royal Bank, which were later amalgamated into the Zimbabwe Allied Banking Group to avoid a total collapse of the sector and to safeguard investors funds.

Criminals flee country

Several others are still under curatorship and could be forced into the ZABG should they fail to recover. Many of the owners of the banks fled the country to lead a life of comfort overseas from their externalised funds.

In the period between 2002 and 2004, real estate companies preferred clients to pay in foreign currency, with the funds deposited in offshore accounts.

"Only one country in the sub-region, South Africa, featured among the likely destinations of funds thus externalised. Others were the United States, the United Kingdom and Canada.

"It appeared that in the destination countries, the foreign currency payments were made through the banking system," said Goredema.

"It is not always practical or prudent to completely outflank the banking system in an outgoing laundering scheme. Some funds are inevitably transferred through intermediaries in the financial services.

"A proportion of financial services intermediaries may facilitate transfer of illicit funds unwittingly, but some will do so knowingly, even as principal beneficiaries," he said.

Government part of conspiracy

While lawyers in Zimbabwe fight against the new law, the government feel that they have been part of a conspiracy to launder money on behalf of their clients.

In one case, the late Roger Boka, a local businessman who pioneered the first indigenous merchant bank in the country, opened and operated several personal accounts at foreign banks in Botswana, South Africa, the UK, the US, Germany, Luxembourg and France.

The transactions were either carried out personally and sometimes through his lawyer, amounting to at least US$21m.

The lawyer, a senior partner in a law firm in Harare, was a director on the board of the bank and a signatory to the bank's account at the Zimbabwe Banking Corporation.

The firm acted as corporate secretaries for the bank and as legal advisors to both the bank and the Boka Group of Companies. The main business specialities of the group were tobacco and gold marketing.

The lawyer disappeared from Zimbabwe shortly after the death of Boka, by which time he had already been charged with violating the Prevention of Corruption Act and the Companies Act.

It was later discovered that the lawyer also operated a foreign bank account in England. None of the foreign funds appear to have been repatriated.

Police trained to spot laundering

To help fight money laundering, the Zimbabwe Republic Police is now offering training in basic accounting for its of- ficers.

The RBZ also plans to set up a Financial Intelligence Unit to monitor financial dealings of all financial institutions. It will monitor suspicious transaction and coordinate anti-money laundering efforts in the country.

Under the proposed guidelines, financial institutions would be required to appoint a money laundering reporting officer whose duty would be to identify customers who could be involved in money laundering.

The banks would be prohibited from allowing the opening of accounts via the internet or through the postal service.

In addition, banks whose customers want to engage in correspondent banking would be required to locate the respondent bank and the bank's regulations, which should include anti-money laundering measures.

The purpose of the account and the identity of the third party using the services would also be required in correspondent banking.

- Business in Africa

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