A Line in the Sand: Getting Tough on Money Laundering in Dubai and the UAE | Westlaw Business

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Whopping $500 million fines are just one reason sanctions and anti-money laundering measures continue to haunt international commerce. With advances in electronic transmittals, hundreds of billions in dirty money swirls all over the world with breathtaking speed and efficiency. Rather than passively watching the problem spiral, however, the United Arab Emirates and one of its prominent regulators have stepped in with aggressive preemptive action.

With last week’s mega fine imposed by the U.S. on ABN Amro (since acquired by Royal Bank of Scotland) for “turning a blind eye” to sanctions against Iran, Cuba and other countries, the focus of international efforts to control criminal cash flows has received renewed attention. The U.S. and the UN have traditionally borne the yoke of international trafficking cops, but when it comes to money laundering, the United Arab Emirates and the Dubai Financial Services Authority (DFSA) have drawn a line in the sand.

The Sanctions Committee of the United Nations, for example, is a subset of the UN Security Council. From Saddam’s Iraq, to Darfur in the Sudan, the UN has long advocated the use of sanctions “as an enforcement tool when peace has been threatened and diplomatic efforts have failed.” As a consequence, companies and individuals doing business with rogue states bring themselves within the legal jurisdiction of a world body.

The U.S., meanwhile, has a number of different mechanisms for combating illicit traffic. On an international scale, the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC), contained within the Department of Treasury, maintains a list of Specially Designated Nationals. Doing business with individuals and companies on this list subjects U.S. citizens and residents to criminal penalties. Because the list is public information, a presumption of intent when doing business with any person or entity on the list. OFAC maintains a list of 20 extant sanctions programs on its website; the site also includes a list of memoranda between OFAC and bank regulators.

Though not as large or influential as the UN or U.S., the UAE, a geographically a tiny Gulf outpost, has in its own right backed up its claim as a world financial center by committing considerable energy and resources to combating not only money laundering but the financing of terror. The DFSA oversees the Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC), a self-contained financial free zone with its own civil and commercial law framework located in the Emirate of Dubai. As for penal law, however, UAE federal law still applies not only to the DIFC but all free zones. The DFSA thus provides the compliance mechanisms and the UAE the criminal penalties for money laundering.

While not an Islamic issue, money laundering has received attention from both the Accounting and Auditing Organization for Islamic Financial Institutions (AAOIFI) and the Islamic Financial Services Board (IFSB). Both organizations, in their respective governance and corporate responsibility provisions, underscore the importance of compliance with relevant AML laws.

via A Line in the Sand: Getting Tough on Money Laundering in Dubai and the UAE.

Worldwide web goes truly global with Arabic | Gulf News

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There’s good reason Arabic advertisements are appearing more and more on websites across the globe.

Online, the Arab language is flourishing as the English-language dominated internet slowly gives way to a new multilingual era, promising billions of new e-commerce dollars and a growing sense of electronic cultural self-identity in the Middle East.

“With more users in the MENA region connecting to the internet, businesses of all types and sizes are starting to realise the opportunity to express their brand values through the online marketing space,” said Joanne Kubba, Global Communications and Public Affairs Manager at Google, Middle East and North Africa.

“This is being driven by the growth in users coming online in recent years. Whilst Google does not reveal country specific data, we have seen an increased demand for Google AdWords,” Kubba said.

According to World Internet Statistics, latest recorded figures show that from 2000 to 2009, Arabic language on the web grew 2,297 per cent, easily ahead of Russia's 1,359 per cent.

Of the world’s total 1.8 billion web users, 60.2 million (3.3 per cent) are Arabic speaking.

The mushrooming of Arabic on the internet can be attributed in part to ambitious policies such as those advocated by the United Arab Emirates, which leads the Middle East region with 74.1 per cent internet penetration.

As many as 3.5 million of the 4.8 million residents in the UAE are online.

Since 2000, the UAE has witnessed a 384 per cent increase in internet user growth, during a financial and social renaissance that has propelled the Emirates onto the world stage.

via gulfnews : Worldwide web goes truly global with Arabic.

Dubai – Transparency attracts foreign capital

A sophisticated economy like Dubai needs to put in place a more focused legal system to tackle issues like bankruptcy, said Brackett B Denniston III the Senior Vice-President and General Counsel with General Electric GE. Besides, almost all GCC countries need to beef up their labour laws, he added. Appreciating the anti-corruption stand of regional governments, he pointed out that more steps taken to enhance transparency could help the region attract more foreign capital.

Denniston told Emirates Business that Dubai had grown fast into a financial hub and its legal system needed to keep pace with this growth. He pointed out that legal disputes in the region were lesser as compared to many developed countries which has helped to bring financial investments into the GCC states.

Besides, the setting up of arbitration courts at Dubai International Financial Centre DIFC and other financial hubs in the Gulf had led to a more confident business environment, he felt.

GE places the UAE and the GCC high on its list of potential business locations, seeing opportunities in the regions infrastructure, energy and healthcare sectors. The company has had a presence in the region as far back as the 1930s. It has been working in the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait and has undertaken a range of projects in Lebanon and Jordan.

via Transparency attracts foreign capital.

With FCPA and OECD, Risk management a must today | Emirates Business

We are seeing more headlines in the Gulf about fraud cases and the recent high-profile prosecutions in the UAE emphasise the current approach of a zero-tolerance policy towards corruption.

The passing of anti-bribery laws and regulations and renewed efforts by governments to clarify and codify specific regulations in more recent legislations and decrees further highlight national efforts to combat corruption at all levels.

For example, provisions in the UAE Penal Code make acceptance of a bribe by a public official a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment and fines and the provider of a bribe or the person who facilitates a bribe can also face criminal liability. Several countries in the Gulf, including the UAE, have signed up to the UN Convention against Corruption and companies in Dubai regulated by the DIFC and DFSA too have a handful of regulations and compliance procedures to watch out for.

American and European companies doing business in the region are always concerned with FCPA and OECD Anti-Bribery provisions and the number of investigations carried out by the US Securities and Exchange Commission for alleged violations of FCPA provisions globally has increased from nine in 2003 to more than 90 in 2008.

It is interesting to note that more local companies in the Gulf are beginning to recognise the act's impact and relevance in relation to business transactions, which is making thing easier for everyone.

What is also often misunderstood is that the FCPA applies only to American companies, when in fact the provisions apply to any entity with physical assets or securities registered in the United States.

[continued] Risk management a must today.