Special Session of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF)
Washington, D.C., 29 October 2001
Printable version
Remarks by Mr. Ronald K. Noble,
Secretary General of INTERPOL
Good Morning. Let me first thank you, Madam President, and let me also thank
my friend Patrick Moulette for the opportunity to make brief remarks at the
beginning of your extraordinary plenary session.
All international organizations are being challenged, as never before, as
a result of the terrorist attacks
of 11 September. As I have said before, these attacks may have occurred
on US soil, but they were actually attacks against the entire world as evidenced
by the fact that citizens from 80 countries were murdered on that date.
These twin towers were chosen as targets because together they were called
the World Trade Center and thus represented the world by name; they were chosen
because they symbolized the heart of the worlds financial centers, and
they were chosen because they attracted over 150,000 visitors per day. It had
to be clear to the terrorists that these attacks would be felt worldwide and
that with these attacks, the reach of terrorism would be demonstrated to have
no geographical limits and no national boundaries.
As a result of these attacks, nations, international organizations tasked with
fighting serious crime and citizens throughout the world are reexamining what
they can do to prevent or minimize the likelihood of future terrorist acts.
In this regard, INTERPOL and the FATF
have complementary roles to play.
This morning, I would like to provide you with some background on how both
INTERPOL and the FATF are being forced to adapt and adjust to changing circumstances.
I also would like to share some thoughts on how INTERPOL and the FATF might
work together to address the new expectations and requirements.
As some of you may know, I had the honor of serving as President of the FATF
six years ago. During my term, the FATF revised the first set of forty recommendations
thereby expanding the focus of money laundering beyond drugs as well as mandating
the reporting of suspicious transactions. We also initiated the financial services
forum, made adjustments in the typologies exercise, and expanded our regional
initiatives. For example, we took what was then considered an extraordinary
step. We sanctioned the Seychelles after they widely publicized a desire to
attract money to its financial institutions even if the money was dirty.
They promised to shield dirty money, and the FATF spoke out clearly against
the Seychelles plan. The FATF's voice was heard and the plan was dropped.
Jean Spreutels of Belgium and my colleague at FinCEN,
Stan Morris, who is now my Director of Cabinet at INTERPOL, created the Egmont
Group during this period. Finally, and perhaps most importantly, we selected
Patrick Moulette as the second Executive Director of the FATF. In Patrick and
the FATF Secretariat, embracing Michele, John and Casey, we have smart dedicated
individuals who devote whatever hours are necessary in order to ensure that
the FATF produces the finest quality product, and it does. For all of these
reasons, I consider my time with the FATF as one of the most satisfying periods
of my professional career.
Much has changed in the past six years. Each year the FATF is gaining more
and more responsibility and notoriety. You are now launched on another revision
of the recommendations and will be consulting private financial institutions
in this effort. I commend the FATF in its ability to adapt to changing needs
while maintaining its fundamental principles and an unbelievably modest budget.
Also, your controversial effort at identifying non-cooperating jurisdictions
has resulted in significant momentum to putting in place a truly worldwide anti-money
laundering program.
This is a delicate process that must be carefully and fairly administered if
the FATF wishes to avoid being unfairly called a private and exclusive club
that punishes only those who are not members. In addition, one must be careful
not to isolate countries in such a way that they are encouraged to provide financial
services to those whom would do us harm. Striking the correct balance between
punishment and forced reform of non-complying countries is a difficult matter.
Nonetheless, I believe that the FATF is up to the challenge. Indeed, the FATFs
prestige has never been higher. It is for this reason that your member nations
are asking you again to consider expanding your mandate into new territory.
As usual, the FATF was wise in its planning because less than a year ago in
Oslo, you addressed the financing of terrorism in your typologies exercise.
Many of the issues you will be addressing over the next two days were considered
at that time.
The most significant issue you will confront is whether the FATF recommendations
should be extended beyond money laundering. Addressing the financial channels
of terrorism presents different issues for us. Some of what we know about the
September 11 terrorist attacks suggests that the financial channels of terrorism
are not the same as traditional money laundering practices where illegally derived
funds are placed, layered and integrated through financial institutions. The
regulatory and law enforcement tools available to identify unusual patterns
of financial activity may not work as well in this area. But, the record-keeping,
know-your-customer and beneficial owner requirements will discourage such activity.
Clearly, we need to know more before we propose Draconian requirements for
financial institutions. The FATF has thus always worked carefully and deliberately.
We still must provide better guidance to the worlds financial institutions
and their employees. Trillions of dollars pour through banks and financial institutions
on a daily basis. Tracking peoples pre-crime activity through financial
transactions is a daunting task. Without close cooperation and trust between
governments and the worlds financial institutions in designing a sensible
response to the threat of terrorism, I fear we will fail.
We must also realize that non-traditional remittance systems have for too long
operated underneath the radar screens of our traditional protection programs.
These systems may be or become the weak link to funding terrorist activity unless
they are part of the solution. INTERPOL will be issuing a study on one aspect
of this problem this week.
It is also clear that the resources to carry out terrorism do not necessarily
require the large amounts of cash that we are often accustomed to when dealing
with profit based criminal activity. Wire transfers between accounts and account
activity may be perfectly consistent with non-criminal activity. Despite these
difficulties, there are important contributions to be made by the FATF in studying
the problem and proposing sensible solutions. INTERPOL thus supports expanding
the FATFs role to address terrorism.
Standing at Ground Zero in New York on Friday and attending the memorial service
in New York yesterday, surrounded by the expressions of grief for the dead and
missing citizens of 80 nations, including scores of police officers and hundreds
of fire fighters has further strengthened my resolve. INTERPOL will do whatever
it takes to help protect the worlds citizens in the future. At INTERPOL,
we also had planned changes before 11 September to make it a better partner
with the FATF.
Those changes were implemented on 11 September when INTERPOL Headquarters became
a 24-hour, 7-day week operational international police agency on that very day.
Never again will the lights be out or the doors locked at our headquarters in
Lyon. This is important to the FATF and its member countries which have a global
presence.
INTERPOL also reorganized its staff and transferred resources in order to develop
a much stronger regional base. The old FOPAC unit is gone. In its place is a
Financial and High Tech Crimes Sub-Directorate with Luciano Guglielmini serving
as its senior money laundering expert. Of equal importance, five new Assistant
Directors have been appointed for each region of the world under a Director
of Regional and National Police Services. Each of these Assistant Directors
will have a money laundering expert. These regions are a close parallel with
your own, i.e. Europe, the Americas, Asia/Pacific, Africa, and North Africa
and the Middle East (essentially, the Arab World.)
This structure will not only help INTERPOL but also the FATF by bringing the
expertise of a worldwide police organization to address money laundering and
other serious crime issues. Furthermore, it will tie our money laundering expertise
more closely to the criminal activities that generate illicit proceeds around
the world.
At INTERPOL we are also engaged in rethinking how we collect data and from
what entities such data should be collected. For example, we are moving towards
establishing a database of stolen or counterfeit identity documents, which will
serve as a way to make it more difficult for terrorists to move themselves and
their money freely around the world. We also want Member States' own databases
of fugitives and suspected terrorists to be made available to INTERPOL and to
one another.
As it relates to the FATF, we want to build bridges to the Egmont Group. With
the Egmont Groups 56 nations and INTERPOLs 179
Member States working on operational matters, we can provide the FATF with
valuable and current data on the financing of terrorist activity within our
Member States.
I know that next month, the FATF will hold a typology session in Wellington,
New Zealand. We will propose a way to coordinate with that effort, and to coordinate
a plan of our own with the FATF, to bring experts from around the world to examine
the financial channels of terrorism with a view to providing guidance to financial
institutions. INTERPOLs initiative is complementary to your efforts because
INTERPOLs symposium will include many non-FATF countries, as well as non-governmental
representatives from academia and the private financial community.
Just last week, our 16th
symposium on international terrorism held in Lyon, began to frame the issues
for such a special meeting. By working with the FATF, we can better coordinate
our initiatives. Duplication and overlap accrue only to the benefit of terrorists
and other criminals.
Let me close with one parting thought. What we are being asked to undertake
is a very difficult and, as I said, daunting task. Attempting to understand
the financial channels of terrorism and designing programmes that prevent financial
institutions from unwittingly being used by terrorists is more difficult than
anything we have undertaken in the past. It requires an understanding of financial
patterns more complex than the issues we have been dealing with over the past
12 years.
We must approach this task with humility. We must also break down the barriers
that too often have impeded effective cooperation. Those barriers exist between
government agencies and between law enforcement organizations. They exist between
the government and the private sector. They exist between countries.
It is now time to rededicate ourselves to building bridges and opening new
channels of communication with those embarking on the same journey to fight
terrorism. I pledge to you that INTERPOL will be your partner as you undertake
your journey, and I again thank you for having given me the honor of addressing
you this morning.