MAP SAR la Princesse Lalla Meryem préside le Conseil d’Administration des Oeuvres Sociales des FAR MAP Signature de deux mémorandums d’entente entre le Maroc et Djibouti dans le domaine de la santé et de la protection sociale ANP La CAIMA offre 3043,75 tonnes d’engrais d’une valeur de 821 millions de CFA au FSSP APS SENEGAL-COMMERCE / Des faux médicaments, des cuisses de poulet et du cannabis saisis par les unités maritimes de la Douane APS SENEGAL-METEO / Le centre et l’ouest seront recouverts progressivement par une couche de poussière dense (météo) MAP Rwanda: le volume des investissements dépasse 2,4 milliards de dollars en 2023 MAP Match USMA-RSB: la CAF rejette l’Appel interjeté par le club algérois et confirme les décisions de la commission des clubs (FRMF) MAP Madagascar: Plaidoyer pour la création d’un réseau de transport public écologique à Antananarivo MAP Abidjan: le RIARC et le REFRAM signent une déclaration sur le renforcement du dialogue avec les plateformes numériques globales APS SENEGAL-SOCIETE / Santé oculaire : des stratégies et orientations prioritaires en cours d’identification

Parliament considers Anti-money laundering Bill, 2020


  15 Décembre      35        Société (45143),

 

By Christopher Arko, GNA

Accra, Dec. 15, GNA – Parliament is working on a Bill to help plug the holes in the existing anti-money laundering regulatory framework and make it more responsive to international standards.

The Anti-Money Laundering Bill, 2020, is to amend and consolidate the laws relating to money laundering and provide for related matters.

“This Bill is to avoid piecemeal legislation in addressing all the deficiencies in Act 749,” Mr Kwaku Kwarteng, the Deputy Finance Minister, told Parliament on Tuesday when the Anti-Money Laundering Bill, 2020, was considered by the House.

Moving the motion for the Second Reading of the Bill, the Deputy Finance Minister observed that the Inter-Governmental Action Group against Money Laundering and Terrorism in 2016 carried an anti-money laundering and financing of terrorism evaluation.

The focus of the exercise was on technical compliance as well as assessed the effectiveness of the anti-money laundering and counter financing of terrorism regime of the country.

The evaluation report identified some strategic deficiencies in the anti-money laundering regulatory framework and said: “Even though the result reflected significant improvement; it still did not meet the revised Financial Action Task Force (FAFT) methodology.”
Mr Kwarteng said Ghana was accordingly placed on the FAFT “grey” list.

In order to address the strategic deficiencies and comply with the FAFT recommendations, the Government had decided to repeal the current Anti-Money Laundering Act, 2007 (Act 749) and submit to Parliament a new Bill.

This is to avoid piecemeal legislation in addressing all the deficiencies in Act 749.

Alhaji Inusah Fuseini, Ranking Member on the Constitutional, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs, stated that the status of Ghana on FAFT was not desirable as it posed very stringent measures not only on Ghanaian businesses but also Ghanaian travellers as they had to demonstrate the sources of their resources.

He said Ghana, being a member of FAFT, imposed on her a responsibility to ensure that she complied with the anti-money laundering requirement by the international regulators.

He said the new comprehensive Bill was intended to incorporate all the current requirements of FAFT to enable Ghana to get out of the “grey list” of countries that had failed to comply with the international regulations.
GNA

Dans la même catégorie