Turkiye removed from FATF money laundering grey list in boost to standing

Turkish Finance Minister Mehmet Simsek addresses a press conference to unveil a savings measures package in Ankara, Turkey, May 13, 2024. (REUTERS)
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Updated 28 June 2024
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Turkiye removed from FATF money laundering grey list in boost to standing

  • Considerable journey ahead to earn more meaningful ratings, economist tells Arab News
  • Country needs at least five additional rating upgrades to reach investment-grade status

ANKARA: Turkiye is celebrating a significant milestone after the international crime watchdog Financial Action Task Force on Friday removed it from its “gray list” of countries requiring special scrutiny, boosting the country’s economic turnaround plan.

“We have made it,” Treasury and Finance Minister Mehmet Simsek wrote on social media platform X.

The decision came during the concluding plenary session of the FATF in Singapore.

The decision by the watchdog  — which was set up by the G7 group — is expected to have profound implications for Turkiye’s economic landscape, bolstering confidence in the Turkish economy, lira, and assets.
 
International banks and investors occasionally base their risk assessments on the FATF rankings.

However, experts are mostly cautious about the immediate effects of the delisting decision on the Turkish economy.

They said that political stability, the rule of law, and more orthodox economic policies also played a role in attracting foreign investment.
 
Turkiye has been gray-listed since 2021 for its failure to combat money laundering and terrorism financing to groups such as Al-Qaeda and Daesh.

A team from the FATF visited Turkiye in early May to assess Turkiye’s longstanding efforts to curb illicit money flows, including further examinations against UN-designated terrorist groups.
 
Turkiye recently enacted legislation governing cryptocurrencies to enhance oversight and align with international standards.

This move is anticipated to appease FATF’s concerns, fortifying the country’s crypto infrastructure against potential exploitation for illicit purposes.
 
In parallel efforts, Turkiye has implemented measures to scrutinize social media influencers for any signs of financial impropriety, underscoring its commitment to combating illicit financial flows.

Simsek and Interior Minister Ali Yerlikaya led the efforts, concentrated on fighting organized crime and terrorism funding.
 
Last year, more than 3,000 suspects were caught and properties worth $3.2 billion were confiscated in countrywide operations.
 
Meanwhile, during ongoing economic policy deliberations, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan reiterated his stance against high interest rates, asserting his belief that lower rates will curb inflation.

The Central Bank, buoyed by a record-high net reserve of $146 billion, maintained its benchmark interest rate at 50 percent for a third consecutive month, anticipating a potential rate cut later this year.
 
Looking ahead, Fitch Ratings has revised its growth forecast for Turkiye’s economy upward to 3.5 percent for 2024, reflecting cautious optimism.
 
Wolfango Piccoli, co-president of London-based Teneo Intelligence, told Arab News: “The removal from the FATF’s gray list is a positive development that adds credibility to Ankara’s economic turnaround plan.”
 
However, for Piccoli and many other experts, it is unlikely to immediately affect the inflow of foreign capital and investment.
 
“It may boost confidence in the country’s financial system, but there are still concerns about Turkiye’s role in helping Hamas to fund itself,” Piccoli said.

He said that several Turkish companies were “sanctioned by the treasury for bypassing Russia-related sanctions.”
 
But one thing is clear, as the International Monetary Fund asserted in a 2021 report, countries that are gray-listed by the FATF face difficulties in attracting short-term capital inflows equivalent to 3 percent of gross domestic product and an additional drop in foreign direct investment.
 
On Tuesday, Washington imposed new sanctions on nearly 50 entities and people for alleged involvement with a “shadow banking network” accused of moving billions of dollars to the Iranian military.

An Iranian-Turkish money-changer and a Turkiye-based currency exchange company were on the list.
 
Prof. Cem Cakmakli, an economist at Koc University in Istanbul, remains cautious and says that FATF’s delisting will not directly affect the economy.
 
“The share of foreigners in the treasury bond market had plummeted close to zero amid the backdrop of low interest rate policies amidst rising inflation,” he told Arab News.
 
“Consequently, exiting the gray list is unlikely to reverse this trend of diminished foreign involvement.”
 
Cakmakli said the primary advantage of being taken off the gray list would probably be manifested through potential credit rating upgrades from global agencies. However, he cautioned that substantial progress is necessary to achieve more favorable ratings.
 
“There’s still a considerable journey ahead to attain more meaningful ratings,” Cakmaklı said, emphasizing the importance of sustained policy coherence in Turkiye’s economic strategy.

“It’s crucial to uphold rational economic policies. We require at least five additional rating upgrades to attain investment-grade status,” the economist said.

 

 


Red Sea disruptions to continue into Q3, Maersk CEO says

Updated 5 sec ago
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Red Sea disruptions to continue into Q3, Maersk CEO says

  • Maersk and other shipping companies have diverted vessels around Africa’s Cape of Good Hope since December to avoid attacks by Iran-aligned Houthi militants in the Red Sea, with the longer voyage times pushing freight rates higher

COPENHAGEN: The coming months will be challenging for carriers and businesses, as disruptions to container shipping via the Red Sea continue into the third quarter, Danish shipping company Maersk said on Monday.
Maersk and other shipping companies have diverted vessels around Africa’s Cape of Good Hope since December to avoid attacks by Iran-aligned Houthi militants in the Red Sea, with the longer voyage times pushing freight rates higher.
“The longer that this lasts, the more our costs will get deeply ingrained,” Maersk said in a statement, citing comments made by CEO Vincent Clerc at “a recent online event with customers.”
“We don’t know yet exactly how much of these costs we will recover and for how long. The higher rates we are seeing right now are of a temporary nature,” Clerc said.
Maersk expects to have missing positions or ships that differ in size from what the company would normally have on a given string, it said, adding that this would reduce the company’s ability to carry the current demand.

 

 


Hunger grips Yemen even more. The UN says more than half of households aren’t eating enough

A man displaced from Yemen's Red Sea city of Hodeidah receives food ration from a charity food distribution in Sanaa. (REUTERS)
Updated 13 min 58 sec ago
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Hunger grips Yemen even more. The UN says more than half of households aren’t eating enough

  • The Iranian-backed Houthi rebels captured much of northern Yemen including Sanaa in 2014 and forced the internationally recognized government into exile

CAIRO: More than half of households in Yemen are not eating enough due to poor economic conditions and a months-long pause in food assistance to millions of people in the rebel-held north, the United Nations food agency said Monday.
The World Food Program update said “severe food deprivation” has reached the highest it’s ever seen in parts of northern Yemen including Al Jawf, Al Badya, Hajjah, Amran, and Al Hodeidah. WFP stopped food assistance to the north in December, citing limited funding and the lack of agreement with the rebel authorities on downscaling the program.
WFP also said the southern part of Yemen, controlled by the internationally recognized government, also has “historic highs” of insufficient food consumption.
Yemen’s civil war began in 2014 and has pushed the economy to the brink of collapse, affecting exports and the value of the local currency.
The Iranian-backed Houthi rebels captured much of northern Yemen including Sanaa in 2014 and forced the internationally recognized government into exile. A Saudi-led coalition intervened the following year to try to restore the government to power. Much of the south including Aden is governed by the secessionist Southern Transitional Council, a United Arab Emirates-backed group that is an ally of the internationally recognized government.
Yemen is experiencing an economic divide fueled by the rivalry between the Houthi and the STC governments, who have established separate and independent central banks and different versions of the Yemeni currency, the riyal.
As of Monday, the Yemeni riyal had depreciated in Aden to an all-time low of YER 1,841 to the US dollar, but stayed stable in Sanaa at YER 530 to the US dollar, according to the Yemen Press Agency. Economists have attributed the significant devaluation in currency in STC-controlled areas to low foreign currency reserves and a decline in crude oil export revenue.
That affects people’s purchasing power. In May, essential food items were available in markets across Yemen but the most vulnerable communities could not afford them, WFP said, noting price hikes in sugar, vegetable oil, wheat flour, and red beans.

 


US expects no ‘fundamental change’ after Iran election

Vedant Patel. (Twittter @StateDeputySpox)
Updated 43 min 31 sec ago
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US expects no ‘fundamental change’ after Iran election

  • “We have no expectation that these elections, and whatever the outcome might be, will lead to a fundamental change in Iran’s direction or lead the Iranian regime to offer more respect for human rights and more dignity for its citizens”

WASHINGTON: The United States said Monday it expected no “fundamental change” from Iran no matter who wins the presidential election runoff and said it did not consider the first round free and fair.
Masoud Pezeshkian, billed as a reformist within the cleric-led Islamic republic, placed first in the election and will go to a runoff Friday against ultraconservative Saeed Jalili.
“These elections in Iran are not free and fair,” State Department spokesman Vedant Patel told reporters.
“We have no expectation that these elections, and whatever the outcome might be, will lead to a fundamental change in Iran’s direction or lead the Iranian regime to offer more respect for human rights and more dignity for its citizens.”
Patel also cast doubt on the official figures on turnout, which were already low.
“Even the Iranian government’s official numbers about turnout, like most other things as it relates to the Iranian regime, are unreliable,” he said.
Iranian authorities said that slightly more than 40 percent of the 61 million electorate took part — a record low turnout for the Islamic republic — and more than one million ballots were spoiled.
The poll had been scheduled to take place in 2025 but was brought forward by the death of ultraconservative president Ebrahim Raisi in a helicopter crash.
 

 


Escalation in Israel-Hezbollah fighting is ‘serious cause for concern,’ says Russia’s UN envoy

Updated 01 July 2024
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Escalation in Israel-Hezbollah fighting is ‘serious cause for concern,’ says Russia’s UN envoy

  • Vasily Nebenzia tells Arab News he hopes both sides realize the consequences of their belligerent rhetoric and all-out war can be prevented
  • He also laments lack of progress in talks between Moscow and the Taliban on improving women’s rights in Afghanistan

NEW YORK CITY: Russia’s ambassador to the UN on Monday expressed hope that all-out war between Israel and Hezbollah can still be avoided. But for this to happen, he added, both sides need to “demonstrate understanding of the consequences of that potentially dangerous development.”

Vasily Nebenzia told Arab News: “We hear belligerent rhetoric about Lebanon from the Israeli leadership, and also replies from Hezbollah saying that they are ready to resist any attempts to invade Lebanon. This has been going on for some time and that gives us a serious cause of concern.

“That will be not the first but one of the next spillovers of the crisis that in fact originated in Gaza. In fact, it originated decades ago. Now, it has already spread to the region, be it Yemen and the Red Sea, and now Lebanon.

“I sincerely hope, wish, this war could be prevented.”

Nebenzia was speaking at a press conference during which he set out Moscow’s agenda as it assumes the rotating presidency of the Security Council for the month of July.

The next regularly scheduled meeting of the council to discuss Lebanon will take place on July 24. During such meetings the council has for years been discussing the full implementation of Resolution 1701, which it adopted in 2006 with the aim of resolving the war that year between Israel and Hezbollah.

Nebenzia expressed hope that the council will not be forced to have an emergency meeting before then to discuss the present situation along the Blue Line, the demarcation line established by the UN in June 2000 to determine whether Israel had fully withdrawn from Lebanon.

Asked how recent rounds of talks with the Taliban had gone, and in particular whether Moscow had pushed the administration to improve women’s rights in Afghanistan, Nebenzia said the group have their own ideas about the issue and he lamented the lack of progress.

“That’s the reality we are facing with the Taliban and their women and girls’ policies,” he said.

“They justify it by Islamic arguments, which are in fact not Islamic, which many Islamic countries are trying to explain to them, but they would not listen.”


Opposition MPs call for state of emergency in southern Lebanon

Updated 01 July 2024
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Opposition MPs call for state of emergency in southern Lebanon

  • UNIFIL mobilizes organizations to support remaining communities in the south
  • Arab League official says Hezbollah no longer to be labeled a terrorist organization

BEIRUT: Several independent MPs, reformists, and opposition parties urged Lebanon’s caretaker government on Monday to declare a state of emergency in southern Lebanon and hand over control to the military.

They asked parliament to adopt a “roadmap to de-escalate and spare Lebanon a war that the Lebanese do not want, and the official legitimate Lebanese institutions have not decided to wage.”

Ashraf Rifi MP called for immediate action to stop all “unauthorized military activities and its apparatuses” in southern Lebanon. 

At a press conference held by the MPs, Rifi, speaking on the group’s behalf, also said the Lebanese Armed Forces should be deployed to confront any threats.

The MPs urged the government to step up diplomatic moves to return to the armistice agreement signed in 1949 and to implement UN Resolution 1701 in full.

Their appeal comes amid fears of military escalation in the region by Israel against Hezbollah.

Rifi said the ongoing war has cost “us the lives of hundreds of Lebanese, thousands of destroyed residential units, in addition to the economic and environmental damages caused by daily Israeli attacks.”

He said that he and his fellow MPs “strongly oppose Lebanon’s participation in a war it has no connection to, and they (represent) the majority of Lebanese.”

Rifi emphasized “the need to separate the Lebanese and Palestinian tracks regarding what is happening in Gaza.”

He added: “We strongly condemn Israel’s actions at all levels, including systematic killing, displacing people, and colonization.

“We want to protect our country and prevent it from being dragged into a broader war that has no goal other than strengthening Iran’s position in the regional equation, does not benefit the Palestinian cause, and destroys Lebanon.

“We will not accept that armed groups, whether local or foreign, operating on Lebanese territory, impose the logic of the unity of the arenas, which is rejected by the majority of the Lebanese, as it brings hostility to Lebanon from the Arab and international communities, the latest of which is Cyprus and the EU.”

He also stressed “the importance of implementing UN Resolution 1701 in all its aspects by all parties, supporting the Lebanese Army and security institutions to control the international borders in the south, east, and north, and implementing international resolutions 1559, 1680, and other international treaties and related Taif Agreement provisions.”

Rifi urged opposition MPs to “convene a parliamentary debate on the ongoing war in the south and its potential escalation and to endorse the points of the initiative they put forward.”

The appeal came as UNIFIL and various other organizations met in Shama to discuss security and support for communities affected by fighting in southern Lebanon.

UNIFIL said the needs of displaced people “are great and require a comprehensive approach.”

It added said the meeting was strongly supported by UNIFIL Sector West Commander Brig. Gen. Enrico Fontana, who stressed the importance of “complementarities between humanitarian organizations and UNIFIL in efforts to support both the displaced and the remaining communities in southern Lebanon.”

Fontana spoke about improving essential services such as waste management, water, electricity, and education.

He said there was a noticeable upward trend in demand for firefighting equipment, humanitarian aid, medical services and medicines.

The meeting included five UN agencies, the representative of the Humanitarian Forum of Lebanese International Non-Governmental Organizations and 11 international NGOs including Mouvement Social, Oxfam, the Norwegian Refugee Council, Save the Children and American East Refugee Aid.

Three national non-governmental organizations — Imam Sadr Foundation, NUSANED, Najee, and the International Committee of the Red Cross — also participated.

In another development, a top Arab League official confirmed that the bloc “no longer classifies Hezbollah as a terrorist organization.”

Hossam Zaki, the league’s assistant secretary-general, made the announcement in a televised statement broadcast by Al-Qahira news channel on Saturday evening.

Zaki, who visited Lebanese officials last week, said that “previous decisions of the Arab League labeled Hezbollah as a terrorist organization, resulting in a communication breakdown. However, the agreement of member states not to use this language allowed for communication with the party.”

The Arab League “does not have official terrorist lists, and its efforts do not involve categorizing entities as terrorist organizations,” said Zaki.

In March 2016, the Arab League labeled Hezbollah as a terrorist organization and “urged them to stop promoting extremism and sectarianism, meddling in other countries’ internal affairs, and backing terrorism in the region.”

The decision was met with reservations from the governments in Lebanon and Iraq.

Zaki’s visit to Lebanon last week, which aimed to contain the escalation in the south, included a meeting with the head of Hezbollah’s parliamentary bloc, Mohammed Raad. 

Also on Monday, Israeli aircraft violated Lebanese airspace over Beirut and its suburbs as well as Mount Lebanon.

Three Hezbollah members were also killed an Israeli strike that targeted a house in the border town of Houla.