[full article at: http://www.iht.com/IHT/TODAY/THU/FIN/launder.2.html]

Paris, Thursday, August 31, 2000
Swiss Discord on Money Laundering


By Elizabeth Olson International Herald Tribune

GENEVA - Two top officials responsible for tracking money laundering in
Switzerland resigned this week on grounds the government lacks a
comprehensive approach to tackle the problem.
Daniel Thelesklaf, head of the federal Money Laundering Reporting Office,
had sought the government's permission to strengthen the power and personnel
of the two-year-old office, but Swiss officials turned him down. Reached at
his office, the 36-year-old lawyer declined comment on his reasons for
resigning the post he has held since February 1998.

However, in a speech last week, Mr. Thelesklaf said the government's policy
toward combating money laundering lacked ''clear direction.''

Mr. Thelesklaf's No. 2, Mark Van Thiel, also resigned.

Folco Galli, the federal police department spokesman, said the resignations
were a logical consequence of a disagreement over how to approach the fight
against money laundering. In Geneva, Bernard Bertossa, a prosecutor, told
Swiss radio that the resignations were a blow to the country's effort to
combat money laundering because it was the only office receiving information
from financial intermediaries, which are largely unregulated nonbank asset
managers.

Mr. Bertossa also said the resignations would hamper efforts to coordinate
information among cantons, which are individually responsible for
prosecuting money laundering.

Some analysts surmise that the Swiss banking business, the country's most
important industry, has been putting behind-the-scenes pressure on federal
and local authorities to ease up on reform because it is frightening away
prospective customers.

Privately, some bankers bitterly remark that Switzerland's new openness goes
much further than necessary, and is more intrusive than policies of many
other countries, including Austria and Britain. Banking critics cited as
excessive a Geneva court order this summer requiring that $500,000 in
damages be paid to a Russian man acquitted after he was tried as part of the
city's effort to show that laundering questionable funds would no longer be
tolerated.

Switzerland has been under serious pressure from the United States and its
European neighbors to abandon banking secrecy on grounds that tax evaders as
well as money launderers can abuse the system. The European Union is
pressing Switzerland to agree to exchange information on nonresident savings
accounts to prevent tax evasion.

Recognizing that its reputation as a haven for shady assets was damaging its
international image, Switzerland has been making very public efforts in
recent years to stem illegal money flows. It has passed tough laws requiring
banks and other financial intermediaries to report suspicious money
movements.

Those efforts have coincided with an increasing international determination
to ferret out countries that harbor money gained from questionable sources,
including tax evasion and bribery. In June, an international task force
published a blacklist of 15 countries accused of failing to adequately curb
money laundering, and the Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation
and Development named 35 countries and territories with lenient laws on tax
evasion.

Although Switzerland's banking industry is estimated to manage as much as
one-third of the world's offshore wealth, the country avoided being included
on either list. In June, Swiss authorities announced that last year they had
frozen almost $1 billion in suspicious money, almost five times as much as
the year before, which was the first period during which banks were required
to report dubious transactions.

Embarrassingly, new cases of troublesome deposits have continued to turn up,
including funds linked to the Bank of New York, which is accused of
laundering billions in Russian funds. And two-thirds of the suspicious
deposits reported was $670 million connected with the late Nigerian dictator
Sani Abacha, his families and associates. This was the largest sum of
apparently ill-gotten funds uncovered in Switzerland since the discovery
more than a decade ago of $550 million deposited here, through a series of
foundations, by Ferdinand Marcos, the former president of the Philippines,
who died in 1989.

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