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Latvia's AML efforts need revitalising, says premier

Josh O'Neill Editor London 2 May 2018

Latvia's AML efforts need revitalising, says premier

Latvia launched only 85 money laundering probes last year, despite the staff at its banks having found 17,900 transactions suspicious, according to Reuters.

Prime Minister Maris Kucinskis of Latvia has promised to invest more in bank surveillance after a US probe prompted the closure of ABLV, Latvia’s third-largest lender, by accusing it of money laundering and failing to enforce sanctions against North Korea.

The number of suspicious banking transactions in Latvia referred to the financial intelligence unit is far lower than similar statistics for Switzerland and the European Union.

In 2017, only 225 files were forwarded to Latvian enforcement authorities - a mere 1% of the transactions that the bank's software or staff detected, according to the government data seen by Reuters. For comparison, in Switzerland around 60% of internal suspicious activity reports were forwarded to police in 2016.

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