Recent anti-terrorist
legislation in the US and the UK allows government agencies to regularly
supervise and inspect businesses that are suspected of being a front for the
''Hawala'' banking system, makes it a crime to smuggle more than $10,000 in
cash across USA borders, and empowers the Treasury secretary (and its Financial
Crimes Enforcement Network - FinCEN) to tighten record-keeping and reporting
rules for banks and financial institutions based in the USA. A new inter-agency
Foreign Terrorist Asset Tracking Center (FTAT) was set up. A 1993 moribund
proposed law requiring US-based Halawadar to register and to report suspicious
transactions may be revived. These relatively radical measures reflect the
belief that the al-Qaida network of Osama bin Laden uses the Hawala system to
raise and move funds across national borders. A Hawaladar in Pakistan (Dihab
Shill) was identified as the financier in the attacks on the American embassies
in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998.
But the USA is not
the only country to face terrorism financed by Hawala networks.
A few months ago, the
Delhi police, the Indian government's Enforcement Directorate (ED), and the
Military Intelligence (MI) arrested six Jammu Kashmir Islamic Front (JKIF)
terrorists. The arrests led to the exposure of an enormous web of Hawala
institutions in Delhi, aided and abetted, some say, by the ISI (Inter Services
Intelligence, Pakistan's security services). The Hawala network was used to
funnel money to terrorist groups in the disputed Kashmir Valley.
Luckily, the common
perception that Hawala financing is paperless is wrong. The transfer of
information regarding the funds often leaves digital (though heavily encrypted)
trails. Couriers and "contract memorizers", gold dealers, commodity
merchants, transporters, and moneylenders can be apprehended and interrogated.
Written, physical, letters are still the favourite mode of communication among
small and medium Hawaladars, who also invariably resort to extremely detailed
single entry bookkeeping. And the sudden appearance and disappearance of funds
in bank accounts still have to be explained. Moreover, the sheer scale of the
amounts involved entails the collaboration of off shore banks and more
established financial institutions in the West. Such flows of funds affect the
local money markets in Asia and are instantaneously reflected in interest rates
charged to frequent borrowers, such as wholesalers. Spending and consumption
patterns change discernibly after such influxes. Most of the money ends up in
prime world banks behind flimsy business facades. Hackers in Germany claimed
(without providing proof) to have infiltrated Hawala-related bank accounts.
The problem is that
banks and financial institutions - and not only in dodgy offshore havens
("black holes" in the lingo) - clam up and refuse to divulge
information about their clients. Banking is largely a matter of fragile trust
between bank and customer and tight secrecy. Bankers are reluctant to undermine
either. Banks use mainframe computers which can rarely be hacked through
cyberspace and can be compromised only physically in close co-operation with
insiders. The shadier the bank - the more formidable its digital defenses. The
use of numbered accounts (outlawed in Austria, for instance, only recently) and
pseudonyms (still possible in Lichtenstein) complicates matters. Bin Laden's
accounts are unlikely to bear his name. He has collaborators.
Hawala networks are
often used to launder money, or to evade taxes. Even when employed for
legitimate purposes, to diversify the risk involved in the transfer of large
sums, Hawaladars apply techniques borrowed from money laundering. Deposits are
fragmented and wired to hundreds of banks the world over
("starburst"). Sometimes, the money ends up in the account of origin
("boomerang").
Hence the focus on
payment clearing and settlement systems. Most countries have only one such
system, the repository of data regarding all banking (and most non-banking)
transactions in the country. Yet, even this is a partial solution. Most
national systems maintain records for 6-12 months, private settlement and
clearing systems for even less.
Yet, the crux of the
problem is not the Hawala or the Hawaladars. The corrupt and inept governments
of Asia are to blame for not regulating their banking systems, for
over-regulating everything else, for not fostering competition, for throwing
public money at bad debts and at worse borrowers, for over-taxing, for robbing
people of their life savings through capital controls, for tearing at the delicate
fabric of trust between customer and bank (Pakistan, for instance, froze all
foreign exchange accounts two years ago). Perhaps if Asia had reasonably
expedient, reasonably priced, reasonably regulated, user-friendly banks - Osama
bin Laden would have found it impossible to finance his mischief so invisibly.
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