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Governmental Corruption And Large Shadow Economy Made Armenia Potent

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  • Governmental Corruption And Large Shadow Economy Made Armenia Potent

    GOVERNMENTAL CORRUPTION AND LARGE SHADOW ECONOMY MADE ARMENIA POTENTIALLY VULNERABLE TO MONEY LAUNDERING AND TERRORIST FINANCING SCHEMES: US STATE DEPARTMENT'S COUNTRY REPORTS ON TERRORISM 2007

    arminfo
    2008-05-02 15:41:00

    ArmInfo. Endemic governmental corruption, a significant organized
    crime presence, and a large shadow economy made Armenia potentially
    vulnerable to money laundering and terrorist financing schemes,
    say the US State Department's Country Reports on Terrorism 2007.

    Armenia's counterterrorism contribution included its continued
    commitment to overflight and landing rights of U.S. military aircraft,
    additional security support to U.S. facilities in Armenia during times
    of terrorist alert, and the renewed deployment of peacekeeping forces
    in Iraq. In addition, Armenia joined the Global Initiative to Combat
    Nuclear Terrorism, and expressed interest in joining the Convention for
    Suppression of Acts of Nuclear Terrorism. In September, a delegation of
    inspectors from the UN Counterterrorism Committee Executive Directorate
    visited Armenia to ascertain its progress in complying with UNSCR 1372,
    and found that 12 of the 13 legal counterterrorism instruments had
    already been implemented or were soon to be implemented. And in July,
    the Armenian government succeeded in adapting the EU export control
    list of "dual-use" commodities to its own national control list.

    The Financial Monitoring Center (FMC), a U.S.-supported financial
    intelligence unit within the Central Bank of Armenia (CBA), continued
    to make investigative strides against money- laundering. During the
    first nine months of the year, the FMC received twenty-four suspicious
    transaction reports (STRs), compared to twenty-three STRs during the
    same period in 2006, and six STRs in 2005. Under its current mandate,
    the CBA can freeze temporarily financial assets while referring the
    STRs to the competent authorities for further investigation. However,
    it must rely on private financial institutions to self-monitor and
    lacked an integrated IT system to store information on financial
    entities or individuals of concern. At the end of the year, no cases
    involving terrorist financing were uncovered or prosecuted. The FMC
    received Egmont Group membership this year.

    Armenia improved border security by maintaining an automated Border
    Management Information System (BMIS) that documented and stored
    the names of travelers at nearly all official points of entry, and
    contained criminal and terrorist watchlists as updated by the Republic
    of Armenia Police (RAP) and National Security Service (NSS). While
    Armenia has no bilateral agreement with the United States governing
    the sharing of information on travelers, the NSS and RAP shared
    information with the U.S. Embassy when they discovered fraudulent
    U.S. visas or other documents of interest to the United States.

    Although Armenia continued to strengthen its counterterrorism
    capabilities and enhanced its counterterrorism cooperation with
    the United States and other international security organizations,
    its geographic location, porous borders, and loose visa regime still
    provided ample opportunities for traffickers of illicit materials,
    persons, and finances.
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