The process of creating a new law on market manipulation is meant to comply with regional and global standards, says Alhagie Darboe, FIU director (Photo Credit: @JoofMS/TNBES). |
The
Gambia is currently drafting a capital market bill that will punish crimes of
market manipulation, an anti-money laundering official in Banjul said on
Thursday.
The
law will form part of the country’s legislative measures in its fight against crimes
of money laundering and the financing of terrorism, according to Alagie
Darboe, director of Gambia’s financial intelligence unit (FIU).
Market
manipulation is
considered a deliberate attempt or action which creates
a misleading price or market for different currencies, commodities or
securities.
[This
law will] also ensure Gambia’s full compliance in criminalising all predicate
offences of money laundering and terrorist financing, he told the 30th
technical commission and plenary meeting of the Intergovernmental Action Group Against
Money Laundering in West Africa (GIABA).
Under pressure
Gambia
came under stern criticisms from GIABA in 2014 after the sub-regional anti-money
laundering agency found
that the country was “slow” in its implementation of AML/CFT measures.
And there
was a call for greater commitment to the fight against money laundering and
terrorist financing, a report by GIABA, which monitors and works to prevent the twin crimes, stated.
Gambia
was directed to address its AML/CFT “strategic deficiencies” or be
named and shamed and subsequently blacklisted as a country not making
sufficient progress to improve its AML/CFT system.
One
of the main obstacles to implementation of AML/CFT measures in the West
African country was “weak law enforcement, low level of reporting and the
lack of prosecution and conviction”, according to GIABA.
In 2014,
concerns were also raised as to Gambia’s capacity to monitor the full stretch
of its borders as smuggling was prevalent despite customs collaborate with
Senegal.
The
country remains one of the routes for drug trafficking and a thriving
underground business of tourism-related human trafficking.
Significant progress
Darboe,
who is also the national correspondent for GIABA in Banjul, said Gambia has made
momentous progress with the establishment of the FIU and the enactment of the ‘Anti-Money
Laundering and Combating of Terrorist Financing Act, 2012’.
Between
2008 and 2012, GIABA placed The Gambia under an “enhanced follow up process”
during which the country was required to be reporting every six months on its
implementation of AML/CFT measures.
After
the establishment of the FIU, Gambia was moved from this “enhanced process” to “expedited
process” due to the significant progress registered in the country’s AML/CFT
regime, Darboe said on November 15, 2018.
The
process of creating a new law on market manipulation is meant to comply with
regional and global standards by criminilising all the predicate offences of
money laundering.
Participants at meeting (Photo Credit: @JoofMS/TNBES) |
Discuss threats
GIABA’s
technical commission and plenary meetings are meant to discuss the threats and
challenges associated with anti-money laundering and countering the financing
of terrorism (AML/CFT) within the sub-region.
They
are also meant to address relevant issues that require a concerted and
harmonized approach to be resolved.
GIABA is a specialized institution of ECOWAS and a
Financial Action Task Force–Styled Regional Body (FSRB) responsible for
combating the scourge of money laundering and terrorist financing in the
sub-regional economic bloc.
It was
established by the Authority of Heads of State and Government of ECOWAS in 2000
with the mandate to protect the national economies and the financial systems of
member States from abuse and the laundering of the proceeds of crimes.
Written by Modou S. Joof
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