In
a speech to European Union lawmakers, Karins also said the best
way to address the problem across the bloc was to set up a
central supervisor to monitor and tackle money laundering,
replacing the patchwork of national watchdogs that have
sometimes proved ineffective against cross-border crime.
EU lawmakers and the European Central Bank have repeatedly
called for the creation of a new supervisor against financial
crime, but many EU governments have opposed the move as they
prefer leaving powers at a national level.
Karins said he wanted to turn the Latvian banking system into
"the cleanest" in Europe, after its reputation was tarnished by
the collapse last year of ABLV, the country's largest bank, amid
money-laundering allegations.
Karins said he was confident that in a year's time he could be
in a position to provide tips to other Europeans on how to clean
up banking systems.
"But it's a little bit like fighting rats. I can make sure that
I get the rats out of my house and my house will be clean, but
what about my neighbors?" he told lawmakers.
Baltic and Nordic countries are grappling with a huge
money-laundering scandal, after allegations the Estonian branch
of Danske Bank, Denmark's largest lender, handled 200 billion
euros ($226 billion) in suspicious transactions of Russian money
between 2007 and 2015.
Sweden's Swedbank has recently been drawn into the scandal,
after it was reported that it handled some of the same payments
that went through Danske..
"The criminals may have left Latvia for now but they have
unfortunately, I'm convinced, not left Europe," Karins said,
adding the problem concerned all European states.
Latvia faces a review by international money-laundering
standards watchdog Moneyval in the coming months, which some
officials fear could label the country as risky, alongside the
likes of Serbia and Pakistan..
(Reporting by Foo Yun Chee in Strasbourg and Clare Roth in
Brussels; Writing by Francesco Guarascio; Editing by Mark
Potter)
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