NY Fed, Bangladesh
central bank to resume normal money transfers: sources
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[August 18, 2016]
By Krishna N. Das and Serajul Quadir
(Reuters) - The Federal Reserve Bank of
New York and Bangladesh's central bank have agreed to withdraw
additional payment security measures put in place after one of the
world's biggest cyber heists, the theft of $81 million from
Bangladesh Bank's account at the Fed, two sources said.
The decision comes after SWIFT, the global financial messaging
platform, promised in May to strengthen security on software tools
used by its clients and to develop new tools that would spot when a
compromised account and raise a red flag when a payment instruction
deviates from normal patterns.
The decision was taken at a meeting in New York this week between
officials from Bangladesh Bank, the New York Fed and SWIFT, said a
source close to Bangladesh Bank who has direct knowledge of the
matter. They have agreed on a tentative timeline to withdraw the
additional security measures but the source declined to give
details.
"(The New York Fed and Bangladesh Bank) want to use (only) SWIFT for
secure communication," said the source, declining to be named as he
was not authorized to brief the media. "We are talking about
normalizing our communication channels as soon as possible."
The New York Fed and SWIFT could not immediately be reached for
comment.
In early February, hackers used stolen Bangladesh Bank credentials
to send three dozen SWIFT messages to transfer nearly $1 billion
from its Fed account, eventually managing to route $81 million to a
bank in the Philippines. Most of the money was laundered through
casinos in Manila and remains missing.
Following the heist Bangladesh Bank initiated a new protocol under
which the Fed could only clear any SWIFT request from Dhaka after a
voice authentication. Fed officials had to call one of two or three
Bangladesh Bank officials whose voice samples were shared with the
Fed.
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A senior Bangladesh Bank official in Dhaka, who declined to be
named, said more time was needed "to improve the system" before
moving back to a SWIFT-only transfer mechanism.
Both sources said the New York Fed wanted to do away with the additional measure
as it delayed genuine transfer instructions. SWIFT has told Bangladesh Bank its
system was secure and that the Asian bank needed to tighten its own defenses to
prevent criminals from hacking into their computer systems.
Bangladesh Bank spokesman Subhankar Saha said he was not aware of the agreement
and would comment only after the bank's delegation came back from the United
States.
The bank said in a statement on Wednesday that its officials discussed with the
New York Fed and SWIFT "certain technical details" of the heist to enhance their
understanding of how the fraud occurred and "steps that have been and will be
taken to remediate the event".
The Bangladeshi delegation also requested the New York Fed to put more pressure
on the Philippines' Rizal Commercial Banking Corp (RCBC) <RCB.PS>, to recover
the rest of the stolen money, said the source close to Bangladesh Bank. The
funds were routed to four accounts at the bank before they disappeared into
casinos in the city.
The New York Fed in June wrote to the Philippines' central bank, prodding it to
help Bangladesh Bank retrieve the money. Bangladesh Bank officials believe the
nudge from the Fed was one of the reasons the Philippines central bank this
month slapped a record fine of 1 billion pesos ($21 million) on RCBC in
connection with the heist.
(Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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