US pushes motion to
put Pakistan on global terrorist - financing watchlist.
The United States has
put forward a motion to place Pakistan on a global terrorist-financing
watchlist with an anti-money-laundering monitoring group, according to a senior
Pakistani official.
Pakistan has been scrambling in recent months
to avert being added to a list of countries deemed non-compliant with terrorist
financing regulations by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), a measure that
officials fear could hurt its economy.
The United States has been threatening to get
tough with Islamabad over its alleged ties with Islamist militants, and last
month President Donald Trump’s administration suspended aid worth about $2
billion.
Islamabad, which denies assisting militants in
Afghanistan and India, has reacted angrily to U.S. threats of further punitive
measures.
A meeting of FATF member states is due to take
place next week in Paris, where the organization could adopt the motion on
Pakistan. The FATF, an intergovernmental body based in Paris, sets global
standards for fighting illicit finance.
Pakistan’s de facto finance minister, Miftah
Ismail, told Reuters that the United States and Britain put forward the motion
several weeks ago, and later persuaded France and Germany to co-sponsor it.
“We are now working with the U.S., UK, Germany
and France for the nomination to be withdrawn,” Ismail said, speaking by
telephone from Europe. “We are also quite hopeful that even if the U.S. did not
withdraw the nomination that we will prevail and not be put on the watchlist.”
Pakistan had been on the FATF watchlist from
2012 to 2015.
A senior U.S. official who follows U.S. policy
in the region said Pakistan has “always been selective” in cracking down on
militants who use its territory as a base.
“It is time for that to stop, and so we are
working with our allies, who also are affected, to see effective action against
groups such as the Haqqanis and elements of the Taliban,” said the official,
referring to militants operating along the border with Afghanistan.
MONEY FLOWS
The FATF had previously warned Islamabad it
could be put back on the watchlist without further efforts to crack down on the
flow of funds to militants.
Pakistani officials and Western diplomats say
that being put on the FATF watchlist could deal a blow to Pakistan’s economy as
it would make it harder for foreign investors and companies to do business in
the nuclear-armed South Asian nation.
“If you’re put on a terror watchlist, you’re
made to go through all the (extra) scrutiny,” Pakistan’s former
counterterrorism chief, Khawaja Khalid Farooq, told Reuters. “It can hurt the
economy very badly.”
Officials also fear it
would be harder and more expensive for Pakistan to borrow money from
international debt markets if it was put on the FATF monitoring list.
Ismail said the FATF
motion focused on Hafiz Saeed, a Pakistan-based Islamist whom India accuses of
masterminding the 2008 Mumbai attacks that killed 166 people. That suggested
the United States had put forward the motion at India’s behest, he said.
A spokesperson at the
U.S. Embassy in Islamabad said the United States was “absolutely not” acting on
behalf of India.
State Department
spokeswoman Heather Nauert said ”the U.S. has consistently expressed our
long-standing concern about ongoing deficiencies in Pakistan’s implementation
of its anti-money laundering/counterterrorism finance regime.
“In addition to
broader systemic concerns, this also includes Pakistan’s non-compliance with
its commitments under UN Security Council Resolution 1267,” she added.
Resolution 1267
requires all states to freeze the assets of people and organizations on a list
established by the resolution, including Saeed and his “Islamic charities.”
Washington has designated Saeed a terrorist.
Saeed has repeatedly
denied involvement in the Mumbai attacks and says the charitable organizations
he founded and controls have no ties with militants.
On Monday, Pakistan
announced it had amended its anti-terrorism law to ban militant groups and
organizations that are listed as “terrorists” by the United Nations, a move
seen to be targeting those charities.
Pakistan’s attorney
general, Ashtar Ausaf, told Reuters the law changes approved by the country’s
president were meant to reflect obligations under the U.N. Security Council
charter.
“We have to march with
the changing times,” Ausaf said, adding that the new laws would enable the
government to track fundraising activities of all the U.N.-proscribed groups
and take punitive action such as freezing their assets.
“MAKES NO SENSE”
In December,
Pakistan’s government drew up plans to seize control of Saeed’s Jamaat-ud-Dawa
(JuD) and the Falah-e-Insaniat Foundation charities. Critics say previous such
efforts have faded once pressure on Pakistan eased.
Washington and the
U.N. say JuD and Falah-e-Insaniat Foundation are a front for the
Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) militant group, which Saeed founded in 1987.
Ismail said Pakistan
had already taken over some parts of Saeed’s organizations and that he believed
other FATF nations would recognize Pakistan had made serious efforts to deal
with militant financing.
He added that moves to
put Islamabad on the FATF watchlist were counter-productive when Pakistan was
already undergoing “mutual evaluation” by experts from other countries, who are
measuring progress in curbing illicit fund flows.
“It’s a very intrusive
process and...we are happy to work with them, but while we are being given
mutual evaluation, it makes no sense for us to be now put on the watchlist,”
Ismail said.
Reporting by Asif Shahzad and Drazen
Jorgic; Additional reporting by John Walcott and Jonathan Landay in Washington;
Writing by Drazen Jorgic; Editing by Alex Richardson and Leslie Adler
Our Standards:The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-pakistan-militants-financing-exclusiv/exclusive-u-s-pushes-motion-to-put-pakistan-on-global-terrorist-financing-watchlist-idUSKCN1FX2EV
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