Special Report-How a little-known G7 task force unwittingly helps
governments target critics
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[August 05, 2021] By
Angus Berwick
(Reuters) - In late 2020, when Ugandan
President Yoweri Museveni faced a fresh challenge to his 35-year rule, a
new tool helped to silence his critics: anti-money laundering
legislation promoted by the G7.
The Financial Action Task Force, established by the G7 group of advanced
economies to protect the global financial system, had written to
Uganda's government eight years earlier telling it to do more to combat
money laundering and terrorism financing or risk being placed on a "grey
list" of deficient countries, according to a top Ugandan official who
described the private letter to Reuters. Such a move could damage
Uganda's ties to foreign banks and investors, which closely follow the
FATF's updates.
Within a year, Uganda's parliament passed a new law to criminalize both
offences and established an intelligence unit to enforce it.
But Uganda didn't deploy the law as the FATF intended.
Last December, as Museveni prepared for a January election, authorities
used the law to temporarily freeze the bank accounts of three rights
groups and arrest a prominent lawyer, 40-year-old Nicholas Opiyo, on
money laundering charges related to the funding of an NGO he founded.
Opiyo, who was later released on bail, called the charges "spurious."
The government has denied using the law to target its critics. In
January, amid accusations of voter fraud by Museveni's main rival, the
electoral commission declared Museveni had won re-election.
Uganda isn't unique.
Reuters found that in at least four other countries – Serbia, India,
Tanzania, and Nigeria – legislation passed to meet FATF standards was
used by authorities to investigate journalists, NGO workers, and
lawyers. Based on interviews with people targeted, government officials
and financial crime experts, the reporting by Reuters provides the first
account of the unintended consequences arising from the task force's
mandate.
Through constant assessments of countries' measures, the FATF plays a
little-known but key role in shaping financial crime legislation and in
dictating governments' security priorities. Across the globe, it has
strengthened laws to crack down on money laundering and terrorist
financing. But by pressuring nations with weak democratic frameworks to
adopt and bolster such laws, the FATF has unwittingly handed a new legal
instrument to authoritarian governments, according to a dozen
researchers at think tanks and human rights groups.
"Its standards are increasingly not just being misunderstood, but are
being purposefully abused," said Tom Keatinge, director of the Centre
for Financial Crime at the Royal United Services Institute in London.
In particular, a focus at the FATF from the early 2000s on tackling
terrorist financing through non-profit organizations has allowed some
governments to pursue legitimate civic groups under the cover of
enforcing international standards, according to researchers. "Non-profit
organizations can get caught in those crosshairs," said Tracey Durner, a
director at the Global Center on Cooperative Security in New York.
The FATF, in emailed responses to Reuters' questions, said it was aware
of reports its recommendations have been misused and was monitoring
governments' oversight of nonprofits. It said this year it established a
working group on the "unintended consequences of poorly implemented"
measures and was identifying possible options to mitigate them.
"Any misapplication of the FATF Standards in a way that suppresses the
legitimate activities of non-profit organisations or curtails the human
rights of individuals is clearly a matter of grave concern and cannot be
condoned in any way as part of the fight against money laundering and
terrorist financing," it said.
Asked about the warning letter sent in 2012 to Uganda's then finance
minister, Maria Kiwanuka, the FATF said it "does not comment on private
correspondence with governments." Kiwanuka, who was replaced in 2015,
told Reuters she received letters from many different parties and
referred comment to the finance ministry, which did not respond to
emails.
Uganda's top anti-money laundering official, Sydney Asubo, who reviewed
the letter at the time, said Opiyo's arrest was a police matter and
declined to comment on the merits of the case.
Asubo defended the government. "We are doing what is required by the
FATF," he said.
Terrorist financing experts consulted by Reuters said the FATF has
limited the funding of groups like al Qaeda by making banks more risk
averse and giving authorities more powers to investigate an entity's
finances. However, they faulted the task force's blanket approach to
improving standards because it fails to take into account the political
motivations of governments and the risk of misuse of the rules. Since
last year, Turkey and Myanmar - countries where authorities have jailed
journalists and democracy advocates - have introduced new legislation
and procedures to meet FATF standards which enable authorities to seek
more financial information from NGOs.
"THE DAMAGE IS DONE"
From its headquarters in Paris, the FATF has long nudged countries into
compliance with Western security standards. Since the G7 established the
task force in 1989, over 180 nations have committed to implementing its
recommendations.
Countries deemed non-compliant with FATF standards are "grey-listed," or
blacklisted, a tag currently held just by North Korea and Iran. In the
case of Uganda, even after passing the 2013 law, it spent three years on
the grey list. A stint on the list keeps a country under close
monitoring, potentially unnerving its foreign investors and complicating
its overseas banking relationships.
Civil groups for years have complained the FATF unfairly stigmatizes
them as conduits for illegal funds. In the wake of the 9/11 attacks on
the United States, the FATF issued a recommendation warning that
non-profit groups were "particularly vulnerable" to terrorist financing,
citing the possibility that terrorist organizations could exploit the
sector to raise and move funds. This recommendation required states to
review their laws to ensure such groups "cannot be misused."
The recommendation complicated funding for various NGOs around the world
as banks, nervous of falling foul of regulators, closed their accounts
or blocked transfers. "It was arguably 'open season' on nonprofits,"
said Keatinge, of the Royal United Services Institute.
NGOs' vulnerability to terrorist financing has been challenged in
studies by Keatinge and other researchers, including in a 2019 report by
the United Nations' Special Rapporteur on Human Rights and
Counter-Terrorism. The report warned the FATF "lent a veneer of
legitimacy" to states that used its provisions to regulate civil
society.
In 2016, the FATF revised its recommendation to remove the phrase
"particularly vulnerable." And advocates like Vanja Skoric, program
director at the European Center for Not-for-Profit Law, say they welcome
the FATF's new working group to examine abuses of its standards.
But, said Skoric, "the damage is done."
The FATF placed Serbia on the grey list in early 2018, saying its
government needed to strengthen its laws so authorities could better
trace individuals' financial information. After Serbia did so, the FATF
de-listed it.
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Nicholas Opiyo, director of the Chapter Four Uganda organisation,
poses for a portrait in an undated handout image provided to
Reuters, July 23, 2021. Chapter Four Uganda/Handout via REUTERS
In July 2020, Serbia's financial intelligence unit sent a letter to local banks
requesting private client data on some 50 NGOs and media outlets known for
criticizing what they consider to be President Aleksandar Vučić's increasingly
autocratic rule. The letter, reviewed by Reuters, sought data on their foreign
currency inflows, under order of the amended law.
After news of the letter leaked, Finance Minister Siniša Mali told a local
television channel the intelligence unit was "doing its job" and the data
requests shouldn't be a problem for the targets "if nothing is hidden." No
individuals have been charged so far.
Maja Stojanovic, director of Serbian nonprofit Civic Initiatives, which was
named in the letter, told Reuters she believes the government is using the data
for smear campaigns to undermine NGOs' work. She cited the example of a senior
lawmaker from Vučić's party who in a speech this March attacked NGOs as
foreign-funded coup-mongers and referenced transfer details which groups had not
disclosed publicly.
When Stojanovic and other targeted NGOs consulted the banks about the requests,
the banks said they couldn't disclose what information they shared with
authorities, according to emails reviewed by Reuters. Spokespeople for three of
the banks, Banca Intesa Beograd, OTP banka Srbija, and Erste Group Bank,
declined to comment, citing banking secrecy laws. Serbia's Office of Media
Relations did not respond to emailed questions.
Last year, it was India's turn to prepare for another FATF evaluation. The then
junior home affairs minister tweeted the government would "disrupt the
terror-financing networks" to meet FATF standards.
In October, the national counter-terrorism agency raided the offices of 10 NGOs
in New Delhi and India-controlled Kashmir, where security forces are battling a
decades-long insurgency. It said in a statement the organizations were using
foreign funds for "secessionist and terrorist activities" in Kashmir. No arrests
were made.
Several of the NGOs, including Delhi-based relief organization Charity Alliance,
denied the agency's claims. They said they were either providing humanitarian
aid or researching alleged rights abuses committed by security forces deployed
in Kashmir – work which was supported by several UN special rapporteurs. One of
the Kashmir-based NGOs told Reuters that during the raid officers seized
documents and hard drives with sensitive information on victims of torture. They
halted the research, fearing further reprisals.
Charity Alliance's chairman, Zafarul-Islam Khan, told Reuters it was a "blatant
lie" that his charity funded terrorism in Kashmir. The counter-terrorism agency
has not provided evidence of any alleged crime, he said, accusing Prime Minister
Narendra Modi's government of trying "to throttle Muslim, Christian, leftist and
human rights NGOs."
India's Ministry of Home Affairs declined to comment.
"SIGNIFICANT PROGRESS"
At the time of the FATF's 2012 warning to Uganda, financial crime there went
effectively unchecked.
Its cash-based economy, porous borders, and weak laws meant the government had
little ability or willingness to trace funding for armed rebel groups or
investigate the huge sums of public money that officials embezzled, according to
researchers and a report by the International Monetary Fund. "It definitely
wasn't a priority," said Liat Shetret, a U.S. anti-money laundering expert who
studies East Africa.
The FATF spurred the government into action. Asubo, a former top prosecutor who
studied law at the University of Liverpool, was appointed to lead the new
financial intelligence unit.
Nicholas Opiyo, the lawyer later arrested, was nervous about how authorities
could use the unit, having represented individuals detained during a government
crackdown on opposition members two years earlier. His human rights
organization, Chapter Four, organized a conference to voice concerns, but few
people attended.
Asubo set up his new unit within the finance ministry. He hired investigators
from other state agencies and acquired software so they could collect data from
banks and review transfers. He also brought on several foreign advisors to help
conduct a national risk assessment, a key step required by the FATF. This
assessment determined that nonprofits had a "medium/high" vulnerability to
terrorist financing, the same as casinos and precious metal dealers, the report
showed.
In 2017, the FATF removed Uganda from the grey list, highlighting its
"significant progress."
But the law criminalizing money laundering and terrorist financing had been
barely used. Only a handful of low-level cases had led to prosecutions,
according to a review of Ugandan criminal cases and a dozen people familiar with
authorities' efforts. A Ugandan prosecutor, speaking anonymously, said there
still was no "political will" to target anyone with government connections.
Then came the 2020 run-up to the election.
Police briefly arrested opposition leader Bobi Wine in November, sparking
protests which the military dispersed with live rounds. Opiyo and Chapter Four
drew attention to alleged extrajudicial killings carried out by police. The
government has said police used proportionate force to restore order during
"violent riots" led by "criminal elements."
The financial intelligence unit ordered banks to freeze accounts belonging to
several organizations monitoring the election campaign, according to several
people familiar with the requests.
Asubo told Reuters this was for a routine check and the accounts were later
unfrozen. His unit also provided police with information on Opiyo as part of an
investigation into his finances, he said.
On December 22 of last year, Opiyo was having lunch with several colleagues when
officers stormed the restaurant and took him away in a van. Two days later, a
court charged him with money laundering for receiving, in the name of Chapter
Four, $340,000 in undefined "proceeds of crime."
Opiyo told Reuters this was an annual grant from a long-standing donor, American
Jewish World Service, a New York-based charity which funds human rights programs
around the world. An AJWS spokesperson confirmed this and said the grants were
in accordance with U.S. and Ugandan laws.
Opiyo said he believed his arrest was intended to disrupt his research on the
election crackdown. "It sent a strong and chilling message to civil
organisations: Nobody was safe."
For a week, Opiyo remained in a maximum security prison. He passed the time
handing out legal advice to other inmates. After the United Nations called for
his release, a court granted him bail and he is now awaiting trial whilst the
investigation continues. In January, Museveni won a sixth term, which Wine
denounced as a fraud.
(Reporting by Angus Berwick; Additional reporting by Krishna N. Das in New
Delhi; Editing by Janet McBride and Tom Lasseter)
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