Terror
Financing: Myth and Reality
by Rachel Ehrenfeld
American Center for Democracy
Presented at the Jerusalem Summit, Jerusalem
November 27-30, 2004
This research was made possible by the generous support
of
The Michael Cherney Foundation |
“The terrorists
aren’t waiting for us to get our enforcement act together.
While we struggle over how to restructure our agencies, they’re
squirreling away money to fund their attacks. Shutting down
terrorism financing must be an urgent and high priority,”
warned Senator Chuck Grassley in March 2004.1 However, not
everybody shared his logic. Both the 9/11 Commission and the
Treasury Department have, according to Treasury Under Secretary
Stuart A. Levey, “recognized that the U.S. Government’s campaign
against terrorist financing must be viewed as but one of many
fronts in the global war on terror, rather than an as an end
in itself.”2 However, Levey admitted that “our counter-terrorism
financing efforts are a vital part of the overall war. Terrorists
require money to train, travel, communicate, indoctrinate,
procure weapons, carry out attacks, and conceal themselves.
Starving them of money debilitates every aspect of their operations
and, ultimately, their ability to survive.”3
Three years after September 11, the United States has designated
387 entities as terrorists or supporters of designated terrorists
and frozen only $142 million in terrorist-related assets,
$37 million of which has been frozen in the United States.
In addition, the U.S. Government has identified and frozen
over $4.5 million in al-Qaeda-related funds, while $72 million
of al-Qaeda’s money has been frozen by other governments worldwide.
Eighty countries have also introduced new terrorism-related
legislation, and 94 have established Financial Intelligence
Units. Altogether, more than 170 countries and jurisdictions
have issued freezing orders,4 however, many frozen accounts
have since been “defrosted” and the money returned to the
account holders.
The mechanisms of terror financing have been described by
Mark Cantor in his study for The American Society of International
Law Task Force on Terrorism. He enumerated the means of terrorist
funding to include “donations to charities, use of shell companies
and otherwise legitimate businesses, and narcotics trafficking.”
In addition to wire transfers through commercial banks, money
was moved via trade mispricing, credit and debit cards, informal
value and underground banking systems, and bulk cash smuggling.
Kantor further noted that “the emergence of trust-based money
transfer systems such as hawala for cross-border funds transfers
creates even more enforcement difficulties, as those networks
lie outside the regulatory system covering financial markets
and clearing systems. The worldwide growth of bearer instruments
in the capital and commodities markets also makes tracing
the ownership of the value embodied in those instruments extremely
difficult. In addition, the use of portable commodities such
as diamonds and gold, rather than direct money transfers,
requires that attention be paid to merchant markets outside
the financial community. Techniques such as over- or under-invoicing,
which convert a legitimate sales transaction into a device
for illicitly transferring value, compound the challenges.”5
In all European states, national legislators long ago realized
that a terrorist group cannot act without an efficient infrastructure
and substantial economic resources. Therefore, national criminal
laws have long included a second category of offenses covering
terrorist activities like attempts to steal property with
the goal of obtaining funds to aid terrorist groups. Such
laws were often supplemented with provisions on money laundering.
After September 11, more rigorous action against money laundering
was taken by extending the scope of the existing criminal
laws, especially in states where financial institutions were
used by the September 11 terrorists to move money.6 In most
countries, September 11 caused the focus to shift from control
to prevention.
Prior to September 11, terrorism financing was proscribed
by the 1999 UN International Convention for the Suppression
of the Financing of Terrorism. Adopted by the General Assembly
in resolution 54/109 of December 9, 1999, this convention
requires parties to take steps to prevent and counteract the
financing of terrorists, whether direct or indirect, though
groups claiming to have charitable, social or cultural goals
or which also engage in such illicit activities as drug trafficking
or gun running. It commits states to hold those who finance
terrorism criminally, civilly or administratively liable for
such acts. Finally, it provides for the identification, freezing
and seizure of funds allocated for terrorist activities, as
well as for the sharing of the forfeited funds with other
states on a case-by-case basis, and eliminates bank secrecy
as a justification for noncooperation.
More specifically, this convention defines funds as “assets
of every kind, whether tangible or intangible, movable or
immovable, however acquired, and legal documents or instruments
in any form, including electronic or digital, evidencing title
to, or interest in, such assets, including, but not limited
to, bank credits, travelers checks, bank checks, money orders,
shares, securities, bonds, drafts, letters of credit.” Article
2 of the Convention stipulates that “any person commits an
offence within the meaning of this Convention if that person
by any means, directly or indirectly, unlawfully and willfully,
provides or collects funds with the intention that they should
be used or in the knowledge that they are to be used, in full
or in part, to carry out…Any other act intended to cause death
or serious bodily injury to a civilian, or to any other person
not taking an active part in the hostilities in a situation
of armed conflict, when the purpose of such act, by its nature
or context, is to intimidate a population, or to compel a
government or an international organization to do or to abstain
from doing any act.” Section 5 further elaborates that any
person also commits an offence if that person:
a) Participates as an accomplice in an offence
b) Organizes or directs others to commit an offence (e.g.
incitement)
c) Intentionally contributes to the commission of one ormore
offences
Article 8, Section 1 calls on each State
Party to the Convention to “take appropriate measures, in
accordance with its domestic legal principles, for the identification,
detection and freezing or seizure of any funds used or allocated
for the purpose of committing the offences set forth in article
2 as well as the proceeds derived from such offences, for
purposes of possible forfeiture.” Article 9, Section 1 says
that “upon receiving information that a person who has committed
or who is alleged to have committed an offence set forth in
article 2 may be present in its territory, the State Party
concerned shall take such measures as may be necessary under
its domestic law to investigate the facts contained in the
information.” Section 2 goes on to say that “upon being satisfied
that the circumstances so warrant, the State Party in whose
territory the offender or alleged offender is present shall
take the appropriate measures under its domestic law so as
to ensure that person’s presence for the purpose of prosecution
or extradition.”
The 1999 Convention mandates further cooperation in Article
12, Section 2, which declares that “State Parties may not
refuse a request for mutual legal assistance on the ground
of bank secrecy” and in Article 18, Section 1, which stipulates
that “State Parties shall cooperate in the prevention of the
offences set forth in article 2 by taking all practicable
measures, inter alia, by adapting their domestic legislation,
if necessary, to prevent and counter preparations in their
respective territories for the commission of those offences
within or outside their territories, including: (a) Measures
to prohibit in their territories illegal activities of persons
and organizations that knowingly encourage, instigate, organize
or engage in the commission of offences set forth in article
2; (b) Measures requiring financial institutions and other
professions involved in financial transactions to utilize
the most efficient measures available for the identification
of their usual or occasional customers, as well as customers
in whose interest accounts are opened, and to pay special
attention to unusual or suspicious transactions and report
transactions suspected of stemming from a criminal activity.”
On January 30, 2004, UN Resolution 1526 called for the freezing
“without delay the funds and other financial assets or economic
resources of these individuals, groups, undertakings and entities,
including funds derived from property owned or controlled,
directly or indirectly, by them or by persons acting on their
behalf or at their direction, and ensure that neither these
nor any other funds, financial assets or economic resources
are made available, directly or indirectly, for such persons’
benefit, by their nationals or by any persons within their
territory.”7
As for national laws after September 11, in almost all countries
a clear-cut separation can be made between prosecuting measures
in place before 11 September 2001 and the introduction of
new laws afterwards.8 Only Spain had not extended its provisions
to international terrorism due to an existing international
component in anti-terror legislation triggered by ETA terrorism
in the French Basque country. However, all countries claimed
that their provisions against money laundering could extend
to terror financing. “The European Council in Tampere noted
that money laundering is at the very heart of organized crime
and should be rooted out wherever it occurs, and as the Extraordinary
European Council of 21 September 2001 stressed that terrorism
more and more relies on the methods of organized crime, the
Council ensured that concrete steps are taken by the member
states to punish these offences severely, and to trace, freeze,
seize and confiscate the proceeds of crime by implementing
the Framework Decision on money laundering and the Second
Money Laundering Directive which includes, for the first time,
the laundering of the proceeds of terrorism.”9
Moreover, the UN Security Council passed several resolutions
to combat terror financing. Security Council Resolution 1373
(September 2001) provides that all States shall:
(a) Prevent and suppress the financing of terrorist acts;
(b) Criminalize the willful provision or collection, by any
means, directly or indirectly, of funds by their nationals
or in their territories with the intention that the funds
should be used, or in the knowledge that they are to be used,
in order to carry out terrorist acts;
(c) Freeze without delay funds and other financial assets
or economic resources of persons who commit, or attempt to
commit, terrorist acts or participate in or facilitate the
commission of terrorist acts; of entities owned or controlled
directly or indirectly by such persons; and of persons and
entities acting on behalf of, or at the direction of such
persons and entities, including funds derived or generated
from property owned or controlled directly or indirectly by
such persons and associated persons and entities;
(d) Prohibit their nationals or any persons and entities within
their territories from making any funds, financial assets
or economic resources or financial or other related services
available, directly or indirectly, for the benefit of persons
who commit or attempt to commit or facilitate or participate
in the commission of terrorist acts, of entities owned or
controlled, directly or indirectly, by such persons and of
persons and entities acting on behalf of or at the direction
of such persons;…10
Resolution No. 1373 also obligates all States
to “deny safe haven to those who finance [or] support…terrorist
acts, or provide safe havens” and to “ensure that any person
who participates in the financing…of terrorist acts or in
supporting terrorist acts is brought to justice….” The Security
Council’s Counterterrorism Committee (CTC) monitors the implementation
of Resolution 1373 and tries to increase states’ ability to
fight terrorism.
Building on 1373, subsequent Security Council Resolutions
1377 (12 November 2001) and 1390 (28 January 2002) underscore
the international legal obligation of states to deny financial
support and safe haven to terror supporters. In the case of
Resolution No. 1390, which falls under Chapter VII of the
UN Charter, all States are required to freeze the financial
assets and economic resources of “Usama bin Laden, members
of the Al-Qaeda organization and the Taliban and other individuals,
groups, undertakings and entities associated with them,” as
named on a continually updated list. However, nothing in these
Resolutions outlines any consequences to a State from failing
to fulfill its obligations.11
The UN also launched a Global Program against Terrorism in
October 2002 as a framework for UNODC’s operational activities
in this field. The Global Program works through two technical
assistance projects on strengthening the Legal Regime against
Terrorism.12 As for the advocacy of terrorism, while generally
“the public support of terrorist ideas as well as the incitement
hereto and to religious and racial hatred are criminalized…in
all democratic countries it has proven difficult to apply
these provisions because they conflict with the freedom of
expression.” This has been the case with Israeli, Spanish
and British courts.13
The Financial Action Task Force (FATF), which coordinates
the global fight against terrorist finance and money laundering.
was reauthorized for eight years when its 33 members pledged
to extend its mandate through 2012.14
However, the UN has violated its own resolutions by financing
terrorism. For example, UNRWA support of Hamas and other Palestinian
terrorists. On October 4, 2004, Commissioner-General of the
UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) Peter Hansen unapologetically
admitted to the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) that
the UN employs members of HAMAS, stating, “oh, I am sure that
there are Hamas members on the UNRWA payroll, and I don’t
see that as a crime.” Yet, over the past four years, thirteen
Palestinians employed by UNRWA have been arrested for alleged
involvement in terrorist activities. In one particularly egregious
example, Nahed Rashid Ahmed Attalah, the agency’s director
of food supplies for Gaza refugees, used his UN car and free
travel permit to facilitate Popular Resistance Committee (PRC)
terror acts. Indicted in September 2002, Attalah admitted
to using his UN vehicle on multiple occasions during summer
2002 to transport arms, explosives, and PRC activists to carry
out terrorist attacks.15 Only days after Hansen’s remark,
thirteen more Palestinian employees of the UN were detained
in connection with terrorism and are now to be indicted.16
Even though Canada has outlawed HAMAS for its terrorist activities,
Peter Hansen’s revelation to the CBC did nothing to stop Canada’s
$10 million annual donation to UNRWA, a sum which accounts
for 5% of the organization’s yearly budget.17 The US, which
provides 30% of UNRWA’s budget, and the EU, which provides
well over 55%, have both banned the military and civilian
“wings” of HAMAS.18 Nevertheless, UNRWA continues to employ
HAMAS members.
Thus far, the UN resolutions regarding terror financing have
had impact only in countries that were interested in their
implementation. However, the UN itself violated these resolutions
outright by financing Saddam Hussein and numerous Islamist
terrorist organizations through the Oil for Food Program.
The excuse used by many UN Member States for not implementing
the anti-terror financing resolutions is that there is no
agreed definition of what constitutes a terrorist.
The UK
Laws
In the UK, terrorism financing is covered
under the 2000 Terrorism Act19 and the 2001 Anti-Terrorism,
Crime and Security Act.20 Under Schedule 1, paragraph 1(1)
of the Anti-Terrorism, Crime and Security Act 2001, an authorized
officer may seize any cash that he has reasonable grounds
to suspect is terrorist cash, which is cash intended to be
used for the purposes of terrorism, cash which consists of
the resources of a proscribed terror organization, or cash
which has been obtained through terrorism. Cash seized under
the Act may be detained for an initial period of 48 hours,
beyond which detention requires a court order. The law has
been criticized for its use of magistrates’ courts which do
not possess the required specialist knowledge to address the
complex issues of tracing and property ownership accompanying
forfeiture cases.
The Act also introduced the new instrument of account monitoring
orders which, when issued by a judge, enable the police to
require financial institutions to provide information on accounts
for up to 90 days. The court’s powers to freeze assets under
investigation are extended to prohibit a person from dealing
with property regarding which a forfeiture order has been
or could be made in criminal proceedings to a pre-trial period
when a criminal investigation has been started by the police
but no charges have yet been brought, thus reducing the risk
that the funds will be used or moved before they can be frozen.
Part 2 of the Act introduces a new power enabling the Treasury
to freeze the assets of overseas governments or residents
who have taken or are likely to take action to the detriment
of the UK’s economy or constituting a threat to the life or
property of a UK resident or national. It empowers the UK
to impose sanctions in cases of urgency, unilaterally if neither
the UN or the EU agree, or where unilateral action is more
appropriate. Freezing orders must be approved by both houses
of Parliament before the end of 28 days.
In terms of incitement, Sections 11-13 of the Terrorism Act
2000 makes it an offense to: a) belong to or profess to belong
to a proscribed organization; b) to invite support for a proscribed
organization or to arrange a meeting in support of it; c)
to wear in public items of clothing or other articles relating
to a proscribed organization in such a way as to arouse suspicion
of membership in or support of it. Sections 15-17 prohibit
a person from raising, possessing or using money, or entering
into funding arrangements, for the purposes of terrorism or
a terrorist organization. Section 18 prohibits participation
of laundering activities tied to terrorist property.
The Implementation
Implementing the abovementioned UN resolutions
led to the freezing of 35 suspect bank accounts in the UK,
comprising £63 million of funds. All bank accounts associated
with the individuals and organizations named in US suspect
lists were also frozen. In February 2003, Dr Basheer Musa
Mohammed Nafi of London University was indicted for his role
in running a racketeering enterprise that supported Palestinian
Islamic Jihad since 1984, for conspiracy to kill and maim,
conspiracy to provide material support to the group, extortion,
and perjury. The following year, it was found that stringent
anti-money laundering laws coming into force in February 2004
meant that dealers in high-value goods, such as cars and jewelry,
would have to register with Customs and Excise if they conducted
transactions involving cash payments of more than £10,000.
The law also applied to professional services firms such as
accountants, law firms and tax advisers.
In November 2002, British citizen Mr. O’Driscoll was arrested
upon bringing back two boxes of Vatan magazine from Belgium,
to be used in fundraising for DHKP-C, a Turkish organization
proscribed under Section 3(4) of the 2000 Terrorism Act. He
was detained overnight and then released, but his property
was retained. The defendant applied for judicial review, arguing
that the offence created in the Act was incompatible with
the European Convention on Human Rights, but the Secretary
of State for the Home Department argued the necessity of said
restrictions to national security and public safety.
In July 2003, the Saudi-based Al Rajhi Banking and Investment
Corporation sued the Wall Street Journal Europe in a libel
case after the Journal included the company on a list of those
whose bank accounts were being monitored by the Saudi Arabian
monetary authority because they “may in the past have had
an association with institutions suspected of terrorism.”
The evidence provided by The Wall Street Journal to the British
court led Al Rajhi to withdraw the case in 2004 (e.g. he lost).
In 2004, another drawn-out libel case regarding terrorist
financing was filed by Jameel and Hartwell against Times Newspapers
Ltd. Hartwell car tycoon and Saudi “Golden Chain” billionaire
Yousef Jameel was alleged to have helped fund training for
the September 11 terrorists. Mr Jameel and Hartwell separately
sued the publishers for libel, claiming that the headline
used suggested that Mr Jameel and his car company were associated
with Osama Bin Laden. Hartwell lost on appeal, and Jameel
continues to appeal.21
Only recently, Treasury chief Gordon Brown ordered the Bank
of England to freeze all assets belonging to Abu Musab al-Zarqawi’s
Tawhid and Jihad group, after it claimed responsibility for
the October 10th beheading of British engineer Ken Bigley.
Following meetings with the World Bank and the IMF, Brown
declared it a criminal offense for any financial institution
to hold or facilitate funds held by the group, saying that
“we must do all in our power to ensure there is no hiding
place for terrorists and no hiding place for those who finance
terrorism.” A spokesman said that Brown did not condemn Zarqawi’s
group earlier despite its beheading of South Korean translator
Kim Sun-il, American businessman Nicholas Berg, two Bulgarian
truck drivers and the two American engineers kidnapped alongside
Bigley because British “legislation requires a high standard
of evidence to be there before the Chancellor can instruct
action to be taken.”22 It seems that as long as British citizens
are not the victims, the British government is in no hurry
to enact the appropriate laws.
The EU
On 8 October 2001, the European Council reaffirmed
“the determination of the EU and its Member States to play
their full part, in a coordinated manner, in the global coalition
against terrorism, under the aegis of the United Nations.
The Council also reiterated the Union’s determination to attack
the sources which fund terrorism, in close cooperation with
the United States.” Within Article V, which governs the EU’s
Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP), the Council then
passed a series of Common Positions regarding terrorist financing.
European Council Regulation 2580/2001 declared that combating
the funding of terrorism was a decisive aspect of the fight
against terrorism and called upon the Council to “take the
necessary measures to combat any form of financing for terrorist
activities.”23 On 26 February 2001, pursuant to UNSC Resolution
1333(2000), the European Council adopted Common Position 2001/154/CFSP
which provided for the freezing of funds of Osama bin Laden
and individuals and entities associated with him. This ban
was extended to al-Qaeda, the Taliban and other individuals
or entities associated with them in the Council Common Position
of 27 May 2002.24
On 27 December 2001, Article 1 of Common Position 2001/930/CFSP
stipulated that “the wilful provision or collection, by any
means, directly or indirectly, of funds by citizens or within
the territory of each of the Member States of the European
Union with the intention that the funds should be used, or
in the knowledge that they are to be used, in order to carry
out terrorist acts shall be criminalized.” Article 2 added
that “funds and other financial assets or economic resources
of a) persons who commit, or attempt to commit, terrorist
acts or participate in or facilitate the commission of terrorist
acts; b) entities owned or controlled, directly or indirectly,
by such persons; and c) persons and entities acting on behalf
of or under the direction of such persons and entities, including
funds derived or generated from property owned or controlled
directly or indirectly by such persons and associated persons
and entities, shall be frozen.” Article 3 went on to say that
funds, financial assets or economic resources or financial
or other related services shall not be made available, directly
or indirectly, for the benefit of persons committing or supporting
terrorist acts, or entities affiliated with such persons.
Articles 6 and 7 prohibit Member States for giving safe haven
or access to their territories to those who finance, plan,
facilitate or commit terrorist acts. Article 8 requires the
Member States to establish terrorist financing as a serious
criminal offence and Article 9 provides for Member State cooperation
in investigating or prosecuting terrorist financing cases.
Articles 2 and 3 of Common Position 2001/931/CFSP, passed
that same day, enumerated a terrorist Annex (subject to amendment
by the European Commission) and mandated that the European
Community order the freezing of funds and other financial
assets or economic resources of persons, groups and entities
listed in that Annex, and prevent financial resources from
being made available to such persons, groups or entities.
Council Regulation 2580/2001 outlined specific definitions
and measures pertaining to the EU’s fight against terrorism
financing.
A major problem that neither the Council of Europe nor the
UN, nor even the US, has addressed is how to define “clean
money” that is sent legitimately to be used illegally by terrorist
organizations (e.g. laws regarding the “soiling” of clean
money). The excuse used by many EU countries for not implementing
EU resolutions in full stems from the reluctance of many to
recognize HAMAS and Hizbollah as terrorist organizations.25
The EU and the Palestinians
Former PA Interior Minister Mohammad Dahlan
confessed to The Guardian August 2004, that all of the funds
which foreign countries had donated to the Palestinian Authority,
a total of $5 billion, “have gone down the drain, and we don’t
know to where.” An independent international study found that
between 1993 and 2002, the EU became the largest single contributor
of direct budgetary assistance to the Palestinian Authority
(PA), contributing over €2 billion itself and a further €2
billion through the individual member states.26 Nigel Roberts
of the World Bank notes that total financial aid to the Palestinians
constitutes “the highest per capita aid transfer in the history
of foreign aid anywhere.” Despite this statement, the World
Bank continued to transfer money to the corrupt Palestinian
Authority, disregarding its own obligations for transparency
and accountability.
The Palestinian Authority, since its inception in 1993, has
systematically abused and misused the international aid it
has been receiving. A minor example is the 7,000 fictitious
names discovered on the PA payroll. Like the fish that begins
rotting from its head, the Palestinian authority’s infamous
corruption begins with nepotism by Chairman Arafat, whose
wife and family are regular beneficiaries of millions of dollars
in aid which was designated to the Palestinian people. The
same is true of Prime Minister Ahmed Qurei and other members
of Arafat’s government and security forces. EU allocations
are not fully monitored, as claimed, and the ability of the
EU’s anti-fraud office OLAF to safeguard taxpayers’ money
is lacking. Meanwhile, the Al-Aksa Martyrs, which the EU has
outlawed, remains on the PA payroll. A BBC interview with
Fatah leaders in November 2003 revealed that the PA had reimbursed
$50,000 of monthly expenses to the Martyrs Brigade. Other
paramilitary terror groups such as “Force 17” and “Tanzim,”
as well as group leaders such as Marwan Barghouti, likewise
draw their salaries and expenses from the Palestinian Authority’s
budget. Not surprisingly, significant portions of donated
funds never reach their intended civilian recipients. This
is why, in the words of a Palestinian human rights activist,
“The biggest problem the Palestinians are facing today is
the fact that they have a leadership that is continuing to
steal their money.”27
Following border closures at the start of the 2000 intifada,
EU funding to the PA increased dramatically; in January 2003
— June 2004, the EU donated $112.79 million, over 26% of total
funding bound for the PA. However, the growing economic hardship
among Palestinians was a clear indication that much of the
aid was diverted for the use of the Palestinian leadership
and terrorist organizations. Meanwhile, international aid
for crises like the 2004 humanitarian disaster in Sudan is
flagging, placing a grater onus on the donors to make sure
that the large sums they allocate towards the Palestinian
cause are being used effectively.
The EU continues to maintain that the IMF closely monitors
use of donated funds, but in the IMF’s own words, it “does
not and cannot control downstream spending by the various
Palestinian agencies,” ultimately leaving the matter to be
decided between the PA and the donors. The IMF further found
that what little PA reform did take place in 2004 only began
when international donors stopped sending funds indiscriminately.
A widely circulated 2003 petition led to the formation of
a Working Group of MEPs on Budgetary Assistance to the PA
in the European Parliament. MEP went on record as saying that
‘Israel really shouldn’t exist,’ that it ‘should be replaced
by Palestine,’ and that as a result ‘Only if the DNA of the
suicide bombers will match the DNA of those who received Euros
will we accept it as evidence.’28 Unsurprisingly, the Working
Group’s findings the following year marked no “conclusive
evidence” of EU funds going to finance terrorists. Similarly,
Jaweed Al-Ghussein, who for 12 years was chairman of the Palestine
National Fund, the financial arm of the Palestine Liberation
Organisation, acknolwedged that Mr. Arafat received monthly
checks amounting to £67 million per annum despite the lack
of any audit or accounting system to control either donations
received or expenditures made by Mr Arafat.
When Theresa Villiers, a London MEP, raised the issue of misused
funds before the European Commission, External Relations Commissioner
Chris Patten explicitly denied that any EU aid had been misused
by Chairman Arafat and the Palestinian Authority.29 But tracing
individual euros is practically impossible because money is
fungible. Indeed, all foreign aid to the PA is deposited in
a single general-purpose bank account. Moreover, the Working
Group found but neglected to mention that the same administrators
in charge of EU-funded budgets were caught by the IMF in the
process of diverting at least $900 million from other Palestinian
taxes and revenues. A November 2003 60 Minutes report also
found that Chairman Arafat had stashed close to $1 billion
in a secret portfolio, accumulated from public funds that
were supposed to be used to benefit the Palestinians. Just
before his death on November 4, 2004 in Paris, new information
regarding much larger amounts of money stolen by Arafat was
revealed.30
Despite these revelations, EU member states continue to fund
the PA. The UK alone has contributed more than £190 million
for EU funding to the West Bank and Gaza between 1994 and
2003, and a further £12 million via the World Bank. According
to British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw, in June 2004 the
UK was spending over £21 million on assistance programs in
Gaza and the West Bank, with £19 million more going to UNRWA
and 7 million to the new World Bank Trust Fund. In addition
to the EU, the World Bank, and UNWRA, the US government’s
contribution to the Palestinians through USAID since 1993
has amounted to $1.3 billion.
Despite the well-documented and pervasive abuse of international
funds, and the Palestinian Authority’s direct involvement
in terrorist activities, international aid keeps pouring into
the pockets of the PA’s corrupt leadership.
In another demonstration of the EU’s disregard for the War
on Terror, Javier Solana and his colleagues, in the October
2004, signed the Syria-EU Association Agreement in Brussels.
This Agreement and its trade provisions mean that the EU will
be helping to finance Syria’s terror machine despite the fact
that Syria remains on US terror list and embargoed.31
Germany
Laws
To prevent incitement to terrorism, the abolition
of the religious privilege in the Associations Act resulted
in the banning of organizations like the Turkish Islamic group
‘Kalifatsstaat’ and its sister organizations, which campaigned
against democracy and party pluralism, and disseminated anti-Semitic
and anti-Zionist slogans. More than 200 bank accounts of individuals
and entities associated with al-Qaeda and the Taliban were
also frozen under article 3 of Regulation (EC) No 337/2000
(adopted by the European Council on Feb 14, 2000), article
2 of Regulation (EC) No 467/200132 and article 2 of Regulation
(EC) No 881/2002,33 and under sections 2 to 7 of the German
Foreign Trade and Payments Act (Auenwirtschaftsgesetz), implementing
Resolutions 1267, 1333, 1373 and 1390 of the Security Council.
Germany likewise signed the UN Convention for the Suppression
of the Financing of Terrorism on July 20, 2002. Germany also
has fully incorporated the FATF Forty Recommendations for
combating money laundering and its Eight Special Recommendations
regarding the financing of terrorism, including questionable
actions carried out via the Internet.34
The financing of terrorism falls under Section 129a of the
German Criminal Code.35 Moreover, under the August 2002 Law
for the Improvement of the Fight Against Money Laundering
and the Fight Against the Financing of Terrorism, an independent
unit responsible for the surveillance of suspicious financial
streams was established within the Federal Office of Criminal
Investigation. This law was prompted in part by the finding
that the September 11 terrorists had moved money through German
financial institutions, as well as by the EU’s second money
laundering directive.36
Section 8, paragraphs 5 to 8 of the Federal Constitution Protection
Act allows authorities, under certain conditions, to obtain
information from credit institutes, financial service institutions,
finance companies, postal service providers, aviation companies,
and companies providing telecommunications services and teleservices
on bank accounts, account-holders and other authorized persons,
monetary transactions and investments.
The Fourth Financial Market Promotion Act pursues the objectives
of closing gaps in the defenses against money laundering,
facilitating the tracking down of illegal money derived from
criminal activity, and fighting the financing the terrorism.
The powers of the Federal Agency for Financial Services to
identify money laundering and illegal banking practices and
transactions used to finance the logistics of terrorism have
been enhanced. Section 25a, paragraph 1(4) of the Banking
Act also stipulates that financial institutions are obliged
under the “know your customer principle” to create adequate
internal security systems for fighting money laundering and
fraudulent activities.37
Implementation
After September 11, the German government
responded quickly to freeze over 30 accounts of entities associated
with terrorists, but the bulk of these assets were afterwards
released, so that at the end of 2003, only 13 accounts containing
3532 euros remained frozen.38 Later, the efforts of German
authorities led to a 2002 seizure of $296,000 which had been
collected by a Hamas front organization.39 On May 25, 2004,
the German Embassy in Washington D.C. brought together 100
participants for a bilateral conference titled “Money Laundering
and Terrorist Financing: What Has Been Achieved in Countering
Abuse of the Financial System? What Needs to be Done?”40 Altogether,
Germany is conducting a total of 181 investigations against
suspected participants in Islamist terrorism, of which 51
cases fall under section 129a (Formation of Terrorist Organizations)
of the Criminal Code.41
The single, central, federal financial intelligence unit (FIU)
established in 2002 within the Bundeskriminalamt (National
Police Office) functions as an administrative unit in charge
of financial market supervision, customs, and legal oversight.
It is responsible for developing money laundering cases before
they go to prosecutors for formal investigation, and it also
exchanges information with its counterparts in other countries.
German federalism has meant that actual enforcement has been
carried out by individual states’ customs/police/financial
investigations unit (“GFG”), which works closely with the
federal FIU.
However, Germany’s strict data privacy laws have made it difficult
for authorities to monitor and take action against financial
accounts and transfers used by terrorist networks.42
France
Laws
Laws to prevent terrorism were passed in
2001 and 2003. Their focus was to suppress weapons trading,
drug trafficking and the use of new technologies, seeking
prevention through curbing the flow of weapons and financial
support. Like Germany, France is a party to the Convention
on the Suppression of the Financing of Terrorism, the most
recent addition to French terrorism law on 10 April 2002.
However, French law does not explicitly stipulate a penalty
for failure to report suspicious activities. Moreover, neither
French nor German law explicitly defines the term “terrorism.”
Article 421-1 of the Penal Code43 stipulates that insider
trading and money-laundering constitute an offence if a person
by any means, directly or indirectly, unlawfully or willfully,
provides or collects funds with the intention that they should
be used or in the knowledge that they are to be used to carry
out acts of terrorism. Article L-152-1 of the Monetary and
Financial Code stipulates that all persons who transfer funds,
securities or financial instruments worth 7,600 Euros or more
into or out of the country without going through a credit
institution or service organization, must file a declaration
with customs. Failure to comply can result in confiscation
of the object in question. Article L-561-1 of the Monetary
and Financial Code requires the reporting of operations which
are known to proceed from drug trafficking or the activities
of criminal organizations, or suspicious transactions that
might be linked to terrorist activities.44
Implementation
In October 2002, French newspapers and anti-terrorism
investigators faulted Britain for failing to extradite an
Algerian man accused of financing the Paris metro bombings
in 1995. Two other Algerian men went on trial in Paris, accused
of an Islamic extremist terror campaign which killed eight
people and injured more than 200. The court decided to postpone
the trial of Rachid Ramda, 33, who has been in prison in Britain
since shortly after the attack while the Home Office and courts
considered requests from Paris for his extradition. In 1996,
a British court originally ruled that he should be sent to
France but the Government failed to implement the order. The
Home Secretary, David Blunkett, finally decided that Mr. Ramda
should be extradited in October 2001, but his decision was
overturned by the High Court, which ruled that Mr Ramda could
not be guaranteed a fair trial in France.
In June 2003, French magistrates put 17 members of the People’s
Mojahedeen of Iran under formal investigation for aiding terrorism,
“criminal association in relation with a terrorist enterprise”
and “financing of a terrorist enterprise.” Earlier 1,300 agents
raided 13 addresses in the Paris area, seizing computers,
files and nine million dollars in cash. But almost all of
the 159 people detained were later released.
The French government’s behavior regarding the war on terrorism
can best be described as hypocritical: although it acknowledges
most terrorist groups, it maintains that both HAMAS and Hizbollah
are political movements, and continues to facilitate the transfer
of funds to these organizations. It also supports the Syrian
government, despite the US embargo on Syria. And finally,
its involvement with the financing of Saddam Hussein’s regime
has been well-documented in the Duelfer Report.45
Italy
Laws
Italy saw the post-9/11 inclusion of a new
paragraph in Article 270(b) of the Criminal Code defining
international terrorism and rendering mandatory the confiscation
of goods used in this context. Law 135 of Mar 29, 2001 provided
for the reform and consolidation of tourism laws in Gazzetta
ufficiale on April 20, 2001.46 Law number 431 of December
14, 2001 adopted the UN Security Council and EU regulations
on international terrorism financing.47 Other organizations
such as the Military Police Unit at the Office of the Prime
Minister and the Committee on Security and Public Order,48
chaired by the Minister of Home Affairs have also stepped
up their activities. As far as international cooperation is
concerned, Italy has ratified the twelve United Nations Conventions
to combat terrorism.49
Italy is actively contributing to the implementation of the
European Union Council Plan of Action which adopted the framework
decisions on combating terrorism, the European Arrest Warrant
and the establishment of joint investigative teams. The Government
has approved the Bill ratifying the “Convention on Judicial
Assistance in Criminal Matters”, and has also issued measures
to amend the Code of Criminal Procedure accordingly. It has
also taken steps to encourage the full use of the innovative
instrument of Community “lists” for the purpose of freezing
the assets of individuals and groups engaged in terrorist
acts which were drawn up at the end of 2001, and are regularly
expanded and updated.
Implementation
In March 2004, Italy submitted ten al-Qaeda
loyalists to be listed as terrorists by the United Nations,
and the US Treasury Department confirmed their terrorist designation.
Headed by Specially Designated Global Terrorist Djamel Lounici,
these ten men used their relationship with the Armed Islamic
Group (GIA) to provide financial and material support for
terrorist activities in Algeria and abroad, and assisted in
illegal immigration to Italy. All ten individuals were convicted
by the Tribunale di Napoli.50 In June 2004, the US Treasury
Department identified six more members of an al-Qaeda cell
operating in Italy’s Lombardi region. Mohamed Ben Mohamed
Abdelhedi, Kamel Darraji, Mohamed El Mahfoudi, Imed Ben Bechir
Jammali, Habib Ben Ahmed Loubiri, and Chabaane Ben Mohamed
Trabelsi were part of a cell that engaged in the trafficking
of arms and chemical materials, and has supplied its members
with false travel documents. The cell was associated with
the Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat (GSPC), which
is on the United Nations’ list of terrorist entities linked
to bin Laden, and thus triggered international obligations
requiring all U.N. member countries to freeze the cell’s assets.51
Spain
Laws
Article 3 of Spain’s law No. 19/1993 on the
prevention of money laundering imposes obligations on financial
entities and other persons involved in the transfer of capital
(including charitable organizations), stipulating that they
must refrain from any transaction in which the issuer or recipient
of funds might be a person linked to activities involving
armed groups or terrorist organizations. Article 575 of the
Penal Code, determining the sanctions for crimes against property,
defines “crimes of terrorism” to include attempts to steal
property with the goal of obtaining funds to aid terrorist
groups. Article 301 features regulations against money laundering
and elevates sanctions for crimes against property in those
cases when they are deemed crimes of terrorism.
In a court case, the initiation of criminal proceedings entails
the precautionary seizure of all money or other assets used
to commit the terror act, following Articles 13, 326, 334
and 589 of the Criminal Prosecution Act. Law No. 40/1979 on
Exchange Controls and Law No. 41/1999 on Payment Systems provide
for the freezing of funds and assets in third-party countries
with respect to persons involved in terrorist acts.
Since September 11, 2001, the draft legislation on Prevention
and Blockade of the Financing of Terrorism allows the government
to block financial accounts and operations when it considers
that this might prevent terrorist activities. Whereas before
only judges could block accounts meant for terrorist acts
as a preventative or repressive measure, the government now
also has that power, though Administration decisions remain
under the Audiencia National’s judicial control and the maximum
term of blockade is six months.
As for incitement, Article 9 of the New Party Act, Organic
Law 6/2002 of June 27, 2002 stipulates that a political party
will be declared illegal if it systematically harms fundamental
rights and freedoms by promoting, justifying or exonerating
attacks against the right to life and the integrity of the
individual, if it foments, facilitates or legitimizes violence,
or complements and supports the actions of terrorist organizations.”
Implementation
In March 2003, Spanish national police in
Valencia arrested four Spaniards and one Pakistani accused
of belonging to a financial network involved in laundering
money bound for al-Qaeda operatives. The Spanish Ministry
of Interior also linked these suspects to a terrorist attack
that took place in April 2002 in Yerba, Tunisia, in which
19 people were killed. On 12 March 2003, a Spanish judge ordered
two of these suspects remanded to prison pending further investigation
of the case, while the other three were released. According
to Spanish authorities, the March 2004 Madrid bombing was
funded by drug trafficking.52 In 2003, Spain chaired with
the United States the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) Terrorism
Finance Working Group. It is also pressing to become a standing
member of the G-8’s Counterterrorism Action Group on the basis
of its high level of technical counterterrorism assistance
to third countries.
Although Spain had been actively pursuing al-Qaeda cells and
arresting members of that and related organizations, no substantial
amounts of money were frozen.
Russia
Laws
Russia has extensive federal legislation
targeting acts of terrorism and other extremist activities,
and providing countermeasures against terrorist behavior.53
Russia’s Money Laundering Act (MLA) of 1 February 2002 imposes
disclosure obligations on banks and other non-banking financial
institutions, and introduces a mandatory suspicious transaction
reporting regime. Government Decree No. 211 of 2 April 2002
establishes the Financial Monitoring Committee, and Government
Decree No. 245 of 17 April 2002 specifies reporting procedures
for designated financial institutions.
The MLA requires banks and other financial institutions to
check the identity of each participant in a transaction and
each beneficial owner of the funds involved, and to report
any suspicious transaction to the Financial Monitoring Committee,
which reviews such reports and refers them to the appropriate
law enforcement body if it finds sufficient evidence for money
laundering. The MLA also empowers the authorized bodies to
monitor, freeze or seize financial resources when ordered
within the framework of mutual international judicial assistance.
In November 2002 the MLA was revised and converted in the
Financing Terrorism Act (FTA). This improvement created new
banking prohibitions, facilitating the monitoring of accounts
and the freezing of administrative accounts of “certified”
terrorist organizations. The requirement to report now also
includes any financial operation to or from a country that
is non-cooperative in combating terror financing, or when
one of the parties is a holder of an account in a bank registered
in such a country. Article 6.2 of the FTA also introduces
a special control regime for financial operations by any person
or organization certified to be involved in extremist activity,
and of any legal entity which is directly or indirectly owned
or controlled by such a person or organization. Articles 115
and 116 of the Penal Code allow seizure of funds when criminal
proceedings have been opened.
Articles 174 and 174.1 of the Criminal Code stipulate anywhere
from a 4-year sentence with fine to a ten-year sentence with
confiscation for money laundering. A 2002 amendment to the
Criminal Code makes terror financing a separate criminal offense
under Article 205.1, punishable with four to eight years of
imprisonment (fifteen years in case of a repeat offence or
offence using an official position). Article 205.1 CC and
Article 1 of the Extremism Bill broadly define financing as
providing funds and other financial support for the commission
of a terrorist act or a terrorist organization, irrespective
of intention.
Implementation
Since banking and financial institutions are not properly
regulated in Russia, it was probably not too difficult for
Chechen leader Shamil Basayev to get the 8,000 euros he claims
to have spent organizing the Beslan school massacre of August
2004.54 Russian authorities have said that the massacre was
financed in part by a Saudi charity and planned by Saudi nationals
who joined the Chechen revolt a decade ago.55
read next

go back

|