Viet Nam commits to fighting money laundering
The 2015 penal code includes revised articles and supplements to fight money laundering, said Chief Justice of the Supreme People’s Court Nguyen Hoa Binh said at a workshop in Da Nang on July 9.
A luxury villa project in coastal central Viet Nam. Buying property under assumed names is a popular method of money laundering. |
He said that some of the regulations are unclear, and guidance is needed to ensure the laws against money laundering are effectively carried out.
"Money laundering criminals often disguise illegal sources of money from their offensive activities with sophisticated means. So, we need a law enforcement force with legal knowledge support and the comprehensive legal system to fight the crime effectively," said Mr Binh.
"Many efforts have been made by Viet Nam’s judicial system in dealing with the crimes for years, and it’s still a challenge as Viet Nam has integrated more deeply into the global economy," he said.
Binh said money laundering is not a traditional crime in Viet Nam, but criminals had used cash to buy property, cars, jewels and precious assets under the names of other people in the country.
He said the workshop was an opportunity for experts, lawmakers and organisations from Viet Nam, Australia and the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) to share experience and ideas on the resolution of the judges’ council of the Supreme People’s Court before issuing the penal code on money laundering.
Jean Cuthill from the anti-money laundering assistance team under the Australian Government’s Department of Home Affairs suggested that Viet Nam needed to provide assessors on the wide range of data and statistics on many examples of money laundering investigations, prosecutions and convictions across a range of different types of crimes, particularly those that are highly profitable.
She said that Viet Nam and Australia were members of the Asia Pacific Group on Money Laundering (APG), and Australia is a member of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) with 37 members.
Cuthill said Viet Nam had a mutual evaluation of FATF in 2008 and the next evaluation will arrive in 2019.
"Viet Nam should also demonstrate technical compliance with the FATF standards and assessment of effective anti-money laundering regimes. FATF has 40 recommendations on the prevention of anti-money laundering, terrorist financing and the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction," she said, adding that more than 190 countries and territories committed to implement 40 recommendations approved by the FATF.
Deputy Chief Justice of the Supreme People’s Court Nguyen Tri Tue said Vietnamese money laundering was first addressed in the penal code in 1999, and the FATF had removed Viet Nam from the list of countries with weak measures to combat money laundering and terrorist financing in 2014.
He said Viet Nam highly appreciated the suggestion from experts on predicate offenses, and the country prosecuted three former officials of Vinashin Ocean Shipping Company (Vinashinlines) on charges of embezzlement in 2016 as well as an online gambling case last year.
According to the investigation agencies, the police had initiated probes against 83 people who were allegedly involved in the online gambling ring. Among them, 41 were accused of organising gambling, 38 of gambling, four for illegally trading invoices, two for money laundering and one using the internet to appropriate assets.
The probe initially found that the money was paid via legal and gateway payments exceeding 9.58 trillion VND (425.7 million USD). More than 9.29 trillion VND, or 97 percent of the total, was transferred via pre-paid telecom cards and game cards. About 168 billion VND was sent from bank accounts.
From 2011-15, Viet Nam’s criminal police force investigated 1,378 corruption and economic offense cases involving more than 3,400 offenders, reclaiming 197 million USD for the state budget, according to a report by the People’s Supreme Court.
(Source: VNS/VNA)