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FM to meet bankers on money-laundering
NEW DELHI: Ahead of the Budget, finance minister P Chidambaram has convened a meeting of all bank chiefs to discuss, among other things, money-laundering issues arising out of a glut of information received from banks and financial institutions in the last year.
The meeting, scheduled for February 5, will discuss filing of cash transaction report (CTR) and suspicious transaction report (STR), which is likely to form the basis for amendments to the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA).
Besides, some of the banking sector's proposals for the Budget are likely to be taken up for discussion and may find a mention when Chidambaram presents the Finance Bill in Parliament on February 28.
The meeting, which comes after the RBI's credit policy later this month, will also dwell upon interest rate movements and the steps initiated by the central bank to check overheating in the economy.
This apart, the agenda includes routine items like a review of small-scale and agriculture lending, relief for debt-prone districts, performance of PSU banks during the third quarter-ended December 2006 and filing of banking cash transaction tax returns.
As part of the Know Your Customer (KYC) guidelines issued by RBI, banks and other FIs are required to report all major cash transactions to the Financial Intelligence Unit every month and if they come across any suspicious transaction, it has to be immediately brought to the notice of the agency within a week, failing which they are liable for penal action.
The government had asked all financial institutions to monitor transactions of high-risk individuals and their alleged fronts on a day-to-day basis.
As part of a global clamour against PEPs ââ¬â Politically Exposed Persons ââ¬â special attempts were made in last year to educate bankers on the need to keep a close watch on such high-risk individuals.
This had also become important since pressure was mounting on India from the US and other countries to join the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), established by the G-7 countries in 1989, to combat money laundering and terrorist financing globally.
PEPs are people who fulfil prominent public functions like heads of state, ministers and deputy ministers, members of Parliament and legislative assemblies, government officials, head of customs, judges, magistrates and state prosecutors, military leadership, important party functionaries like opposition leaders, senior bureaucrats and top industrialists.
While the government's FIU arm is already functioning, the PML Act, which was set up on the lines of a similar act used by FATF member countries, is yet to take off with the Enforcement Directorate.
NEW DELHI: Ahead of the Budget, finance minister P Chidambaram has convened a meeting of all bank chiefs to discuss, among other things, money-laundering issues arising out of a glut of information received from banks and financial institutions in the last year.
The meeting, scheduled for February 5, will discuss filing of cash transaction report (CTR) and suspicious transaction report (STR), which is likely to form the basis for amendments to the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA).
Besides, some of the banking sector's proposals for the Budget are likely to be taken up for discussion and may find a mention when Chidambaram presents the Finance Bill in Parliament on February 28.
The meeting, which comes after the RBI's credit policy later this month, will also dwell upon interest rate movements and the steps initiated by the central bank to check overheating in the economy.
This apart, the agenda includes routine items like a review of small-scale and agriculture lending, relief for debt-prone districts, performance of PSU banks during the third quarter-ended December 2006 and filing of banking cash transaction tax returns.
As part of the Know Your Customer (KYC) guidelines issued by RBI, banks and other FIs are required to report all major cash transactions to the Financial Intelligence Unit every month and if they come across any suspicious transaction, it has to be immediately brought to the notice of the agency within a week, failing which they are liable for penal action.
The government had asked all financial institutions to monitor transactions of high-risk individuals and their alleged fronts on a day-to-day basis.
As part of a global clamour against PEPs ââ¬â Politically Exposed Persons ââ¬â special attempts were made in last year to educate bankers on the need to keep a close watch on such high-risk individuals.
This had also become important since pressure was mounting on India from the US and other countries to join the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), established by the G-7 countries in 1989, to combat money laundering and terrorist financing globally.
PEPs are people who fulfil prominent public functions like heads of state, ministers and deputy ministers, members of Parliament and legislative assemblies, government officials, head of customs, judges, magistrates and state prosecutors, military leadership, important party functionaries like opposition leaders, senior bureaucrats and top industrialists.
While the government's FIU arm is already functioning, the PML Act, which was set up on the lines of a similar act used by FATF member countries, is yet to take off with the Enforcement Directorate.