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Much terrorist cash is funneled through traditional and generally unregulated cash couriers. Carrying vast amounts of cash in and out of Persian Gulf countries is common, and the governments in the region are reluctant to crack down on it, even if they were capable of doing so. Even the U.S. has been unable to shut down the traditional cash transfer networks, known as hawalas, on its own soil. It is now a criminal offense to operate an unlicensed money remitter in the United States, but just 20 percent of the country's money services bureaus have registered, according to State Department report from March. One emerging problem is stored value cards, which are similar to debit cards but can be issued anonymously. Current U.S. law does not regulate how much money can be stored on a card, so hundreds of thousands of dollars can be taken out of the country without any declaration. The report does cite progress, even in the Gulf states: For the first time, the UAE has required hawalas to register with the government. As of May, 369 money brokers had submitted applications. Saudi Arabia has removed cash collection boxes from mosques to prevent donations from being sent abroad to Islamic extremists. Saudi charities now are prohibited from sending money outside the kingdom. The report also finds terrorist cells have turned to crime to raise funds. According to the report, which cited a French intelligence official, one cell netted about a million euros when a member whose job was to restock ATMs robbed several of them. In another French case, a cell blew a hole in the wall of a cash distribution center. Members would have walked away with 4 million euros had the hole not been too small to enter. ___ On the Net: Washington Institute for Near East Policy: Treasury's Office of Terrorism and Financial Intelligence:
http://www.washingtoninstitute.org/
http://www.ustreas.gov/offices/enforcement/
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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