In a shift, Bangladesh
Bank says no plans to sue Fed, SWIFT
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[August 16, 2016]
By Serajul Quadir and Jonathan Spicer
DHAKA/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Bangladesh's
central bank said it has reversed its plans to sue the Federal Reserve
Bank of New York and the SWIFT money transfer network, and instead
intends to seek their help recovering $81 million stolen by cyber
thieves in February.
"At the moment we have no plan to go for any legal action against the
Fed bank or SWIFT; rather we will seek their assistance," said Subhankar
Saha, the spokesman for Bangladesh Bank. He declined to provide reasons
for the turnabout.
A source close to the Asian central bank last month said it was
preparing litigation to seek compensation, claiming errors by the New
York Fed and SWIFT had made Bangladesh Bank vulnerable. In the February
heist, hackers issued false transfer orders on the SWIFT network to move
funds out of Bangladesh Bank's account at the Fed.
Bangladesh's finance minister had also said in March he was weighing
legal action.
"We only assessed different options, including the legal (option)," Saha
said on Tuesday. "We look forward to cooperation both from the Fed and
SWIFT."
Officials from the Fed and Bangladesh Finance Minister Abul Maal Abdul
Muhith were not immediately available for comment.
The shift came as meetings were to begin in New York on Tuesday between
officials from Bangladesh Bank, the New York Fed and SWIFT. It also
comes after the New York Fed last week published its standard contract
with correspondent banks, which spells out that the burden of preventing
and reporting breaches lies largely with the correspondent bank, in this
case Bangladesh Bank.
Saha said there was no link between the decision not to pursue a lawsuit
and the contract. "We were assessing options, and we prefer
cooperation," he said.
Deputy Governor Abu Hena Mohammad Razee Hassan, who is heading the
Bangladesh Bank team in the New York meetings, said the bank operates
under the standard Fed contract. He did not comment on any possible
lawsuit.
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The Swift bank logo is pictured in this photo illustration taken
April 26, 2016. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri/File Photo
The standard contract includes a requirement for the correspondent bank
to "immediately" notify the U.S. central bank when it learned it was
hacked, and to give the Fed "a reasonable opportunity to act" on
cancellation requests. The Fed was bound to then "make reasonable
efforts" to halt any fraudulent payments it had made.
The New York Fed is liable for acting on unauthorized payments only if it does
not comply with agreed authentication messages, or fails to exercise good faith
when filling a payment request, according to the contract.
The published contract notes litigation must be heard in a U.S. court.
In the Feb. 4 heist, the hackers peppered the Fed with payment requests, four of
which were filled. Much of the money disappeared into casinos in the
Philippines.
Reuters reported last month that Bangladesh Bank did not realize it had been
hacked and d id not attempt to alert the New York Fed until two days after the
money had been sent. By that time, a weekend in New York, the Fed took two more
days to respond.
Reuters also reported that the New York Fed attempted and failed to cancel the
payments and did not immediately inform Bangladesh Bank of its efforts.
(Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan and David Greising)
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