Sunday, August 21, 2011

Bofors scandal

Chronology of Bofors scandal
 Following is the chronology of events in the Bofors howitzer payoff scandal:


March 24, 1986: A $1.4 billion contract between the Indian government and Swedish arms company
AB Bofors signed for supply of over 400 155mm howitzers.
April 16, 1987: Swedish Radio claims Bofors paid kickbacks to top Indian politicians and key
defence officials to secure the deal.
April 20, 1987: Then Indian prime minister Rajiv Gandhi assures the Lok Sabha that neither was any
middleman involved in the deal nor were kickbacks paid.
Aug 6, 1987: Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC) set up under B. Shankaranand to probe into
allegations of kickbacks.
February 1988: Indian investigators visit Sweden.
July 18, 1989: JPC report presented to parliament.
November 1989: Rajiv Gandhi loses power as Congress defeated in general elections.
Dec 26, 1989: Then prime minister V.P. Singh's government bars Bofors from entering into any
defence contract with India.
Jan 22, 1990: Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) registers complaint in the case.
Jan 26, 1990: Swiss authorities freeze bank accounts of Svenska and AE Services, who allegedly
received unauthorised commissions for the deal.
Feb 17, 1992: Journalist Bo Anderson's sensational report on the Bofors payoffs case published.
December 1992: Supreme Court reverses a Delhi High Court decision quashing the complaint in the
case.
Feb 9, 1993: Supreme Court rejects former Bofors agent Win Chadha's plea for quashing the letters
rogatory sent by the trial court to its counterpart in Sweden seeking assistance in the case.
July 12, 1993: Swiss federal court rules that India was entitled to Swiss bank documents pertaining
to the kickbacks.
July 29/30 1993: Italian businessman Ottavio Quattrocchi, who was representing Italian fertiliser firm
Snam Progetti for several years, leaves India to avoid arrest warrant the CBI was seeking.
Jan 21, 1997: After four years of legal wrangles, secret documents running into over 500 pages
given to Indian authorities at a public ceremony in Berne.
Jan 30, 1997: CBI constitutes special investigation team for the case.
Page 1/3
Copyright 2011 IndiaeNews.com. All Rights Reserved.Feb 10, 1997: CBI questions ex-army chief General Krishnaswamy Sundarji.
Feb 12, 1997: Letters rogatory issued to Malaysia and United Arab Emirates (UAE) seeking arrest of
Quattrocchi and Win Chadha.
May 1998: Delhi High Court rejects Quattrocchi's plea for quashing of the 'red corner' notice issued
by Interpol at the request of CBI.
Oct 22, 1999: CBI files first chargesheet naming Win Chadha, Quattrocchi, former Indian defence
secretary S.K. Bhatnagar, former Bofors chief Martin Ardbo and Bofors company. Former prime
minister Rajiv Gandhi's name figured as 'an accused not sent for trial' as he was killed in 1991.
Nov 7, 1999: Trial court issues arrest warrants against Quattrocchi, while summoning other four
accused.
Dec 13, 1999: CBI team goes to Malaysia to seek extradition of Quattrocchi; fails in its efforts.
Early 2000: Quattrocchi approaches the Supreme Court for quashing of arrest warrant against him.
Court asks him to appear before CBI for interrogation while protecting him from being arrested.
Quattrocchi refuses to accept the order, saying his counsel misled the court.
March 18, 2000: Chadha comes to India to face trial.
July 29, 2000: Trial court issues 'open non-bailable arrest warrants' against Ardbo.
Sep 4, 2000: Chadha moves Supreme Court for permission to go to Dubai for treatment. Supreme
Court rejects plea a week later.
Sep 29, 2000: Hindujas issue statement in London saying funds received by them from Bofors had
no connection with the gun deal.
Oct 9, 2000: CBI files supplementary chargesheet naming Hinduja brothers as accused in the
Bofors gun deal.
Dec 20, 2000: Quattrocchi arrested in Malaysia, gets bail but is asked to stay within the country.
Aug 6, 2001: Former defence secretary Bhatnagar dies of cancer.
Oct 24, 2001: Win Chadha dies of heart attack at his New Delhi residence.
Nov 15, 2002: Hinduja brothers formally charged with cheating, criminal conspiracy and corruption.
Dec 2, 2002: Malaysian court denies India's request for Quattrocchi's extradition.
July 28, 2003: Acting on India's request, Britain freezes Quattrocchi's bank accounts.
Jan 4, 2004: Swiss authorities agree to consider CBI's request for providing Quattrocchi's bank
details.
Page 2/3
Copyright 2011 IndiaeNews.com. All Rights Reserved.Feb 4, 2004: Delhi High Court clears Rajiv Gandhi of involvement in the Bofors kickbacks scandal.
May 31, 2005: Delhi High Court clears Hindujas of involvement in the scandal.
Dec 31, 2005: The CBI tells Crown Prosecution Service (CPS), London, that it has not been able to
link the money in two accounts of Quattrocchi with the Bofors kickbacks
Jan 7, 2006: Two accounts of Quattrocchi in London banks containing 3 million euros and $1 million
were defreezed after then additional solicitor general B. Dutta met the CPS lawyers.
Feb 6, 2007: Quattrocchi detained at Iguazu international airport on an Interpol lookout notice.
Feb 13, 2007: CBI writes to ministry of external affairs for Argentinean Extradition Act and tells
Interpol Buenos Aires that documentation being prepared for extradition proceedings.
Feb 24, 2007: Fresh warrant of arrest against Quattrocchi obtained from Delhi court.
Feb 26, 2007: Quattrochhi released on bail with condition that he does not leave Argentina.
Feb 28, 2007: Two-member CBI team to leave for Argentina
March 1, 2007: Argentinean judge examines CBI's application seeking Quattrocchi's extradition.
Decision pending.
March 27, 2007: Two-member CBI team returns to New Delhi, awaits court decision. Court decides
to take up matter on May 7
 ( © IANS / India eNews)
Page 3/3
Copyright 2011 IndiaeNews.com. All Rights Reserved.

Friday, October 23, 2009

Hawala remittance system and money laundering

Hawala remittance system and money
laundering


Purpose:
We are discussing a MENA UNCAC implementation programme. I need to better understand
how Hawala works in the MENA region. What its risks are and also what its benefits are for
poor people and how these might be balanced.
Content:
• Part 1: Overview of Hawala Remittance Systems
• Part 2: The Role of Hawala Remittance Systems in Money Laundering
• Part 3: Further reading
Summary:
Hawala remittance systems - also referred to by the Financial Action Task Force as alternative
remittance systems – are informal banking arrangements that allow the transfer of funds both
domestically and internationally without using formal financial institutions. As a cheap, fast, and
reliable money transfer system, they are primarily used by migrant workers overseas sending
remittance to support their families in their home countries. Although it is difficult to quantify
accurately the volume of funds transferred every year to the developing world through such channels,
remittances are very important sources of income for many impoverished households and may play
an important role in promoting growth and development. However, in the aftermath of 9/11, there has
been growing concern on their potential role in money laundering. As they are anonymous and
require minimal documentation, they can be easily misused by criminal organisations, including
terrorist groups to conceal the proceeds of criminal activities or corrupt officials to launder the
proceeds of corruption.
Part 1: Overview of Hawala Remittance Systems
In the aftermath of 9/11, there has been renewed interest in Hawala remittance systems and their
potential role in facilitating illegal or terrorist activities. There is still limited knowledge on informal
funds transfer systems and the extent to which they are misused for illegal purposes, including for
both money laundering and terrorist financing.

Transparency International
mchene@transparency.org
Reviewed by:
Robin Hodess, Ph.D.
Transparency International
rhodess@transparency.org
Date:
23 May 2008
U4 Expert Answer


What is Hawala?
Hawala remittance systems are a fast, safe and cost-effective way to transfer funds both domestically
and internationally without using formal financial institutions. As such, it is an informal fund transfer
system that runs in parallel to – and usually independently from – the formal banking system. Such
systems were originally developed to facilitate trade between distant regions at a time or in regions
where conventional banking instruments were either absent, weak or unsafe.
The FATF uses the following definition of alternative remittance systems:
“Alternative remittance systems cover any system used for transferring money from one location to
another and generally operating outside the banking channels. The services encompassed by this
broad definition range from those managed by large multinational companies to small local networks.
They can be of legal or illegal nature and make use of a variety of methods and tools to transfer the
money”. (Please see: http://www.fatf-gafi.org/dataoecd/16/8/35003256.pdf).
Hawala remittance systems are not per se illegal. As a remittance system, Hawala is submitted to the
national regulations governing remittance services. In some countries, Hawala is illegal from a
regulatory perspective, although enforcement is difficult as such services are usually advertised in
ethnic media or via internet in vernacular languages. In addition, Hawala brokers often run legitimate
businesses alongside the remittance services that they offer, which further challenges potential
detection. In South Asian countries such as India or Pakistan, there are laws that prohibit speculation
in the local currency and foreign exchange transactions at another rate than the official exchange
rate, which makes Hawala systems as they currently operate illegal. Some countries also impose
registration/licensing requirements to money remitters or strict regulations over domestic and
international remittance.
How does Hawala Operate?
Hawala remittance systems involve the transfer of the value of currency without physically moving it.
A customer – usually a migrant worker- approaches a Hawala broker and gives him a sum of money
to be transferred to a beneficiary – usually a relative - in another city or country. The Hawala broker
often runs a legitimate business in addition to the financial services he offers and has a business
contact, a friend or a relative in this city/country. The Hawala operator contacts their Hawala partner –
usually a contact from their personal or business network - in the recipient city/country by phone, fax
or e-mail. The operator instructs the partner to deliver the funds to the beneficiary, providing amount,
name, address and telephone number of the recipient and promises to settle the debt at a later stage.
The customer does not necessarily receive a receipt but is given an identification code for the
transaction. The Hawala broker in the recipient city/country contacts the beneficiary and delivers the
funds. The recipient can receive the funds without producing identity documents other than the
previously agreed code.
There is no recorded agreement or written contract for the transaction. The deal is secured by the
trust between the parties with no legal means of reclamation.
Such systems suppose that the Hawala broker is connected to a network of other brokers to arrange
the payments or knows people who can access such networks in the recipient city/country. Hawala
networks are therefore often (but not only) based on kinship or family ties, as the closer the
relationship, the easier the settlement process will be. They usually advertise services for
countries/cities where such connections exist.
Each time the Hawala broker gives payment instructions, an informal debt is created. The Hawala
broker that delivered the funds to the beneficiary needs to recover the money from the first broker. In
some cases, predominantly in the Middle East, a courier brings the money from one party to the




other. The formal banking system can also be used to settle alternative remittance debts, but the
system more typically relies on alternative methods, using a mix of legal and illegal means of
settlement.
Hawala partners may be business partners, typically involved in import/export activities. In such case,
transferring money is one of the activities they are regularly engaged in as part of their normal
dealings with one another. The debt settlement can be done by “manipulating” invoices to conceal
money transfers, for example by under-invoicing or over-invoicing shipment of goods.
The Hawalla broker delivering the money to the end beneficiary may also owe the other money,
repaying his debt by paying the Hawala customers. The first broker may also have entrusted the
second one with money for Hawala activities. In such cases, there is no need for the second broker
to recover any money.
Once the transaction is complete, there is no need for record keeping and neither for reporting nor
regulatory requirements for customer identification. Hawala transactions leave no paper trail,
business documentation or financial records for law enforcement agencies to track the origins of the
transfers.
Extent of Hawala Remittance Systems
Hawala brokers operate more or less openly in all parts of the world and the system has global reach.
The only limits to the transaction are the risk involved for the remitter to carry cash and the capacity
of the receiving broker to cover the transaction. The United Arab Emirates, especially Dubai, are
believed to handle the largest volume of transactions, but the system is widespread in countries such
as Pakistan, Indian and the Persian Gulf states.
The extent of Hawala systems has been little explored in the literature and cannot be quantified
reliably and accurately given the informal nature of the transactions. It is impossible to provide a
precise figure, but it is likely that it ranges to billions of USD. Some countries make estimates based
on their expatriate community and balance of payment data. In Pakistan, officials estimate that more
than USD 5 to 7 billions enters into the country every year through Hawala channels. (Please see:
http://www.treas.gov/offices/enforcement/key-issues/hawala/) In the case of India, Interpol estimates
the size of Hawala at possibly 40% of the country’s gross domestic product. It is estimated that
globally between USD 100 billions and USD 300 billions flow through informal remittance systems
every year. (Please see: http://www.un.org/esa/desa/papers/2002/esa02dp26.pdf).
In spite of its informal nature, alternative remittance systems may have direct and indirect
macroeconomic implications and have a potential impact on monetary accounts of both remitting and
receiving countries. Informal financial transactions are neither reflected in official statistics nor
recorded in the foreign assets of the recipient country or liabilities of the remitting countries. At the
same time, such transactions are believed to increase the circulation of cash in the recipient
countries and affect the composition of broad money. Alternative remittance systems may also have
an indirect effect on monetary policies as they influence the demand and supply for foreign
currencies. Alternative remittance systems also have negative fiscal implications for both remitting
and receiving countries. As the funds circulate outside the official system, they are not subject to tax
and represent a loss of business both for the formal financial system and government income.
The literature points to the need to survey and compile information on the importance of these
alternative remittance systems as well as on the regulations governing them in the various countries.




The Profile of Hawala Users
Advantage for users
All authors consulted agree on the advantages of using Hawala both for legal and illegal purposes.
Hawala is attractive to customers as it provides a fast, safe and convenient way to transfer funds,
usually with a far lower commission than that charged by the banks. In countries where there are
strict regulations governing domestic and international money transfers, Hawala can be driven by
capital flight motivations, by customers concerned with internal security and stability using alternative
remittance systems to place money abroad, or pay for education or medical treatment. There is an
array of advantages for users:
• The system is cost effective. Hawala brokers take a small commission and usually practice
more advantageous exchange rates than the official rates. Hawala operators have low
overheads, and generate profit through small commissions and exchange rate speculations.
• The system is safe. In countries plagued by political insecurity such as Afghanistan, it is one
of the most convenient, safe, reliable and inexpensive ways to move funds within the
country.
• The system is efficient. A Hawala remittance transaction takes place within one or two days.
• The system is reliable. The system is based on trust and there are no reported instances of
customers being cheated in the literature. A breach of trust would keep the customers
away.
• The system is flexible and not bureaucratic. The informal nature of the transactions makes
them very attractive to users with tax, immigration or other legal concerns. For example,
illegal migrants do not have adequate identification and couldn’t use the formal banking
system to send money home.
• The system is anonymous. It facilitates transfer of money without records or documentation.
• The system doesn’t leave a paper trail. As it is rare that Hawala brokers keep records after
the transaction is completed, it is unlikely that the transaction will be identified or detected.
• The system is culture friendly. For migrant workers, ethnic or kinship ties with the Hawala
brokers make this system particularly convenient and easy to use.
Profile of Users
The speed, cost-effectiveness, safety and potential anonymity of Hawala transactions contribute to
widespread use (for both legal and illegal purposes) and make them a rational choice for the poorest
segments of the population.
Hawala is traditionally associated with South Asia and the Middle East. Its primary users are
members of the expatriate populations from the Indian sub continent, East Asia, Africa, Eastern
Europe who migrated to Northern America, Europe and the Persian Gulf region and send remittances
to their family who remained in their country of origin. These funds represent important sources of
income for some countries. In 2005, the World Bank estimated that remittances to developing
countries from overseas workers amounted to USD 126 billions in 2004, representing twice the
amount of Official Development Assistance. A study by the Inter-American Development Bank
concludes that Latin America and the Caribbean are the main recipient areas of remittance in the
world (31%), followed by South Asia (20 %) and the Middle East and North Africa (18%). (Please
see: http://tcdc1.undp.org/Remittances_Oct102005B.pdf).
Remittance from migrant workers- whether transferred through formal or informal channels- are very
important to both the national economy and individual households as a means to escape poverty. In
a 2005 background note, UNDP explores the potential role of remittance in achieving the Millennium
Development Goals, including the goal of reducing the proportion of people living in absolute poverty
and suggests that remittance to developing countries can play an instrumental role in reducing




poverty and promoting growth and development. (Please see:
http://tcdc1.undp.org/Remittances_Oct102005B.pdf). The following data and information are mostly
drawn from this background note.
In countries in post-conflict states or affected by economic hardships, remittance are a very important
part of family maintenance and economic survival for millions of impoverished households. For
example, in Haiti, remittances represented 17 % of the GDP in 2001 and accounted for up to 40 % of
the GDP in Somalia in the late 1990s. A 2003 UNDP survey estimates that more than 25 % of
families in Somalia receive remittance from abroad. According to a survey conducted in Armenia,
remittances make up to 80 % of household incomes on average and appear to go to the most
vulnerable households, keeping families above the poverty line. Similar trends have been observed in
Tajikistan, Eritrea or the Comoros, suggesting high dependence on remittance per capita.
Informal channels are the most commonly used systems of remittance transfer for less developing
countries as well as economies in transition, as there are considerable price differences between the
formal and the informal systems. The average cost of transferring remittances to Central and South
America can be as high as 20 %. There are cases in which low income customers are not charged at
all for the transfer when using alternative remittance systems.
The system is particularly convenient for populations that are out of reach of the formal financial
sector because they live in poor and remote areas, where it is not profitable to open local branches of
formal banking institutions. In a context of political insecurity, this may be the only option to reach
isolated segments of the population. In conflict affected countries such as Afghanistan for example,
the Hawala system constitutes the safest way to circulate money in the provinces and the population
uses it to transfer funds around the country. More recently, they have also been used by the majority
of international and domestic NGOs and development agencies to provide financial services for the
delivery of emergency relief and humanitarian aid.
Remittance can also be used for investment and play a key role in developing small businesses.
More information would be needed on the use of remittance, but it is believed that a substantial
portion is re-invested in land and housing, vehicles purchase and education services. Some
remittances are also spent on machinery and shops to start up an income generating activity. One
can also reasonably assume that, even when spent on consumer goods, remittance can stimulate
growth. A study of Mexico suggests that each dollar of remittance generates three dollars of spending
power.
Part 2: Hawala Remittance System and its Role in Money
Laundering
The many above-mentioned advantages of Hawala remittance systems don’t make them attractive
only for “legitimate” users. In the wake of 9/11, there has been renewed interest for Hawala systems
and growing concern about its potential role in facilitating serious crimes including money laundering
and terrorism financing.
Potential for Abuse
While Hawala system may serve legitimate purposes for migrant workers or poor people, its specific
characteristics make it vulnerable to those wanting to launder the proceeds of criminal activity. As
they are anonymous and require minimal documentation, external oversight of Hawala transactions is
limited and detection risks are minimised. This makes them susceptible to abuse by individuals and
groups transferring proceeds of crimes or funds to finance illegal activities. There is, for example, a
long-standing tradition among Columbian drug traffickers to use informal “underground” banking
systems.




In addition, the formal financial sector has been subject to increased oversight in recent years, which
may provide criminals with additional incentives to launder their profits via less regulated systems
such as the Hawala systems. Money laundering through the formal financial system involves a series
of risks that have increased with recent know-your-customer campaigns and heightened scrutiny over
suspicious transactions. Smuggling large amounts of cash in low regulated areas also carries a high
risk of losses. Alternative remittance systems can minimise transaction risks and allow placing the
money in the banking system while avoiding the reporting requirements of the formal banking system.
As adopted in the general assembly in 1995, Interpol defines money-laundering as “any act or
attempted act to conceal or disguise the identity of illegally obtained proceeds so that they appear to
have originated from legitimate sources”. More specifically, money laundering methods seek to hide
the source of the income through a series of financial transactions, either through the formal or
informal financial system. Money laundering activities typically involves three major steps, namely the
placement, layering and integration stages. There is a consensus in the literature on the fact that
Halawa remittance systems have the potential to facilitate all stages of the money laundering
process:
• Placement of criminal proceeds. At this stage of the process, illicit proceeds are placed
within the legitimate financial system. The risk for money launderers is to raise suspicions
about the size and source of income, as some regulations require reporting over a certain
amount of cash handled. Large deposits can be split into smaller deposits in different
financial institutions or accounts, or mingled with the deposits of a legitimate business. The
Hawala system provides an effective means of placement, as in most cases, the Hawala
broker can make deposits at the bank that are justified by its other legitimate business
activities. He/she may also use the cash received to meet business related costs, thus
reducing cash deposits at the bank.
• Layering of criminal proceeds. This stage involves a series of financial transactions where
the money is moved by electronic or wire transfers through the financial system to make it
impossible to track its origins. Funds are typically moved through a combination of front
companies or shell corporations operating from financial tax havens and/or redistributed
through a series of accounts in smaller amounts. Multiple remittances can occur in the
layering process. Alternative remittances such as Hawala systems constitute a relatively
safe layering alternative in a money laundering scheme. In the absence of paper trails or
record-keeping of the transactions, Hawala transfers are difficult to trace and tie to the
original source of money. Layering can be done by using Hawala brokers in several
countries and distributing the transfers over time.
• Integration of criminal proceeds. At this stage, funds are finally made available for use
and return to the money launderer in the form of a legitimate income, such as profit from a
shell company or mixed with the profit of a legitimate business. Integration shares common
features with the Hawala debt settlement process and can be accomplished through
investment in a legitimate business, the purchase of bonds or property, or an import/export
invoice.
Evidence or Lack of Evidence
Illegal flows of moneys are difficult to track or separate from legal money flows, as criminals develop
new and more sophisticated methods to avoid detection. Empirical evidence and information on the
extent and use of alternative remittance systems for money laundering activities remain thin,
anecdotal or non-existent.
In 2005, the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) acknowledged the potential misuse of alternative
remittance systems by including a full section on such systems in its money laundering and terrorist
financing typologies. The reports states “Although the alternative remittance sector is largely




composed of legitimate operators, some categories of alternative remittance systems have
nevertheless been involved in the transfer of funds related to illegal activities. (…). Experience over
the last decade has shown that alternative remittance systems can be misused for illegal purposes,
including for both money laundering and terrorist financing”.(Please see: http://www.fatfgafi.
org/dataoecd/16/8/35003256.pdf).
Other authors argue that Hawala networks are neither the only nor the main vehicle of illegal fund
transfer. In an article published in 2003 in Risk Management, Nikos Passas argues that evidence
from the 9-11 attacks shows that most of the funds received by hijackers reached the US through
formal financial institutions. (Please see: http://www.palgravejournals.
com/rm/journal/v5/n2/abs/8240148a.html). However, the 9/11 commission report in 2004 still
maintains that Osama Bin Laden relied generally on established Hawala networks operating in
Pakistan, Dubai and throughout the Middle East.
There have been some established cases where Hawala or Hawala-like techniques were used to
launder proceeds of criminal activities. In a report published in 2000, Interpol provides a brief
description of such cases in its appendix. They involve cases of narcotics trafficking, terrorism, alien
smuggling, welfare fraud, insider trading, custom and tax violations, and gambling. (Please see:
http://www.interpol.int/Public/FinancialCrime/MoneyLaundering/Hawala/default.asp). The link
between corruption and alternative remittance systems has not been specifically documented in the
literature, but most authors implicitly connect Hawala to the laundering of corruption proceeds.
In 1998 Interpol also conducted a study to determine the structure and operations of alternative
remittance systems in the Asia and Pacific region, through a review of existing literature on
alternative remittance system and a survey of 31 Interpol member countries in the region. Response
to the survey provided a working sample of 25 Interpol member countries of which 21 reported some
form of alternative remittance system operating within their borders. 13 of the 21 countries
experiencing alternative remittance systems found that they operate as a money laundering tool,
including Hong Kong, China, India, Indonesia, Japan, Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Philippines, Turkey
and Vietnam. Interpol records a variety of criminal proceeds laundered through such systems in the
region, including profits from the drug trade, arms, gold and gem smuggling, terrorism, and
corruption.
Interpol countries in the Gulf and the Middle East observed that alternative remittance systems tend
to launder profits of drug trade, gold smuggling, extortion and terrorism. Information regarding
specific operational aspects of the system is not available for this region. Experts in neighbouring
countries also report that alternative remittance systems are used in the Gulf as a conduit and
financing mechanisms for the gold trade in the Indian subcontinent. (Please see:
http://www.interpol.com/Public/FinancialCrime/MoneyLaundering/EthnicMoney/default.asp).
Recommendations by International Organisations
The FATF released in October 2001 eight special recommendations on terrorist financing, which
combined with the forty recommendations on money laundering outlines a comprehensive framework
to detect, prevent and combat money laundering. Special recommendation VI focuses explicitly on
alternative remittance, outlining three core elements. The objective of these elements is to bring all
money transfer services, whether formal or informal, within minimum legal and regulatory
requirements, in accordance with the relevant FATF recommendations. These recommendations
focus on key areas such as licensing/registration, due diligence, customer identification, record
keeping, suspicious transaction reporting, compliance monitoring, sanctions and awareness raising.
The sixth recommendation targets alternative remittance systems and include three major aspects:
(Please see FATF’s interpretative note to special recommendation VI:
http://www.oecd.org/document/34/0,3343,en_32250379_32236947_34261877_1_1_1_1,00.html#INS
RVI).
U4 Expert Answer
8
• Jurisdictions should require licensing or registration of persons or legal entities providing
value/money transfer services, including through informal systems or networks;
• Jurisdictions should ensure that money/value transfer services, including informal systems
or networks, are subject to the applicable FATF forty recommendations and the eight special
recommendations;
• Jurisdictions should be able to impose sanctions on money/value transfer services, including
informal systems networks that fail to obtain a licence/register and fail to comply with
relevant FATF recommendations.
The IMF highlights differences in regulatory and supervisory responses to alternative remittance
systems between remitting and receiving countries. In recipient countries, the key issues include
foreign exchange regimes, the quality of the formal financial system and the level of political stability.
Regulations tend to be influenced by these concerns. In remitting countries, there are concerns about
the potential abuse of such remittance systems by criminals. Regulatory measures include
registration/licensing, customer reporting and record keeping requirements. (Please see:
http://www.oecd.org/document/34/0,3343,en_32250379_32236947_34261877_1_1_1_1,00.html#INS
RVI).
The IMF encourages a two-pronged approach toward regulation:
• In countries where an informal Hawala system exists alongside a well-functioning formal
sector, it is recommended that Hawala dealers be registered and keep adequate records in
line with the FAFT recommendations. Efforts should focus on improving the level of
transparency in these systems by bringing them closer to the formal financial sector. In
countries torn by conflicts, such registration may not be feasible.
• The regulatory response should simultaneously address weaknesses that may exist in the
formal sector.
Efforts to regulate Hawala remittance systems are challenged by the limited knowledge of those
systems and the extent to which they are exploited by criminal organisations. Too strict regulations
may push such systems underground or deprive poor people from legitimate sources of income and
survival in many countries. Regulatory concerns should therefore strive to balance the prevention of
misuse with the need to ensure that flows of legitimate funds continue to reach the developing world.
Part 3: Further Reading
Money Laundering and Terrorist Financing Typologies 2004-2005 (2005)
This report from the FATF dedicates a full section to alternative remittance systems and describes
how these networks work in practice, with the view to identifying areas of vulnerability and risks of
misuse for illegal purposes. http://www.fatf-gafi.org/dataoecd/16/8/35003256.pdf
Regulatory Frameworks for Hawala and Other Remittance Systems (2005)
This report prepared by the IMF presents the proceedings of the second International Conference on
Hawala. The conference resulted in a statement identifying the challenges of implementing a
regulatory framework for Hawala remittance systems. Participants agreed that there is a need to
gather and analyse more data and knowledge on those systems.
http://www.apgml.org/frameworks/docs/8/Regulatory%20Frameworks%20for%20Hawala%20and%20
Other%20ARS%20-%20IMF%202005.pdf
The Potential Role of Remittances in Achieving the Millennium Development Goals (2005)
In this Background note, UNDP explores the potential role that remittances can play in promoting
growth and development in developing countries. Although the issues involved are complex,
remittances are important for developing countries as they provide access to substantial additional




financial resources and support the sustainability of livelihoods.
http://tcdc1.undp.org/Remittances_Oct102005B.pdf
Informal Funds Transfer Systems (2003)
This joint IMF-World Bank paper provides an analysis of the Informal Hawala System, presenting its
major features, its uses as well as an economic analysis of Hawala transactions. It concludes by
outlining legal and regulatory aspects of Hawala remittance systems.
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/nft/op/222/
Combating the Abuse of Alternative Remittance Systems: International Best Practices (2003)
This best practice paper prepared by the FATF is intended to provide additional details to the
Interpretative Note on Recommendation VI that addresses risks associated with alternative
remittance systems. It provides guidance on how to detect those systems outside the formal banking
system and focuses on practical issues such as identification of money transfer services, procedures
for registration/licensing and customer due diligence procedures.
http://www.fatf-gafi.org/dataoecd/32/15/34255005.pdf
Hawala and Other Informal Value Transfer Systems: How to Regulate Them? (2003)
This article summarises the findings of an 18 month study of the mechanics and settlement
processes in Hawala networks and concludes with some policy implications. http://www.palgravejournals.
com/rm/journal/v5/n2/abs/8240148a.html (available for purchase).
The Money Exchange Dealers of Kabul (2003)
This study of the Hawala system in Afghanistan was undertaken to determine current practices of
Hawala in Afghanistan, verify assertions regarding convenience, speed, cost-effectiveness, identify
characteristics that make Hawala vulnerable to abuse and consider appropriate regulatory and
supervisory options.
http://www1.worldbank.org/finance/html/amlcft/docs/ARS/The%20Money%20Exchange%20Dealers
%20of%20Kabul.pdf
Informal Money Transfer Systems: Opportunities and Challenges for Development Finance
(2002)
This paper reviews the main types of informal money transfer systems (IMTS). IMTS remain today
the preferred remittance vehicle among migrant communities. Characteristics such as low transaction
costs, speed and little paperwork render them more attractive than banking institutions. The paper
proposes measures to make those systems less prone to potential abuse by criminals and encourage
the development of formal sector alternatives.
http://www.un.org/esa/desa/papers/2002/esa02dp26.pdf
Alternative Remittance Systems Distinguishing Sub-systems of Ethnic Money Laundering in
INTERPOL Member Countries on the Asian Continent (2000)
A study of 31 INTERPOL member countries in Asia/Pacific was conducted in 1998 by questionnaire
and telephone interview to test the hypothesis that two dominant and distinct alternative remittance
systems prevail in the region; the first encompassing the Asian-oriental countries and the second
covering the Indian sub-continent. The data set is comprised of the 21 INTERPOL countries reporting
the presence of ethnic banking inside their borders. Observational trends in operational aspects
within each system lend support to the hypothesized existence of two distinct ethnic banking systems
in the region.
http://www.interpol.com/Public/FinancialCrime/MoneyLaundering/EthnicMoney/default.asp
The Hawala Alternative Remittance System and its Role in Money Laundering (2000)
This paper presents a description of the Hawala remittance system. Hawala is an ancient system
originating in South Asia; today it is used around the world to conduct legitimate remittances. Hawala
can and does play a role in money laundering. In addition to serving as a “tutorial” on Hawala

transaction, this paper will also discuss the way in which Hawala is used to facilitate money
laundering. http://www.interpol.int/Public/FinancialCrime/MoneyLaundering/Hawala/default.asp

Newsletter by World-Check, the recognised authority on reducing risk through intelligence.
www.world-check.com/experttalk
APRIL 2009
Expert Talk
Modes and strategies of terrorist
financing in South Asia
by Sadia Sulaiman and Ankur Kumar, Research Analysts, World-Check Singapore (TIRU)
2
n the wake of the 9/11 terrorist attacks on the US, South
Asia attracted world attention due to the extent and
spread of terrorist networks operating there. Besides the
myriad indigenous groups present, the region is home to Al-
Qaeda, currently located inside Pakistan’s autonomous tribal
areas. The terrorist threats emanating from this region are of
local, regional and global concern.
Several historical and structural factors contribute to an environment conducive for
terrorist activities. The relatively recent statehood of South Asian states (India and
Pakistan were both founded in 1947) has provided only a thin veneer of cohesion
among an extraordinary heterogeneous grouping of old nations and ethnolinguistic
groups. Secessionist tendencies remain strong. In addition, inter-state border and
territorial disputes create geopolitical uncertainty that drains state resources, and
porous and undefined borders along with sharp ideological contests and vast
inequalities of wealth all remain perennial concerns. The convergence of these
factors helps create the right environment for terrorist groups to not only organize
and stage plots, but more importantly to gain access to the funds necessary for
carrying out their local, regional and global terrorist campaigns.
The South Asian terrorist groups can be broadly divided into Islamist groups
like al-Qaida, Lashkar-e-Tayyiba (LeT), Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), Jammat-ul
Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB), and separatist and nationalist groups including the
United Liberation Force of Assam (ULFA), Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE)
and Maoist groups operating in India. The general fundraising techniques of these
groups are more or less similar. While these groups vary in their size, objectives,
tactics and strategies, their financing strategies can broadly be defined under the
following categories.
Donations & Charities
Donations, whether voluntary or coerced, from people with shared ideological or
religious beliefs has emerged as an important source of terrorist financing in South
Asia. Since South Asia contains a considerable Muslim population, it is easy for the
Islamic charities to convince people to pay their Zakat - compulsory proportion
(2.5%) of one’s savings each year to be given to the poor – to them. Such raising
and transferring of funds is no longer limited to the domestic context in countries
directly affected by terrorism. It also has widespread implications for the international
community in its efforts to eliminate terror financing.
In this context, funds raised through diaspora communities have become a crucial
source of terrorist financing in the region. There are several ways in which separatists
and Islamists utilize them to generate sufficient funds to carry on their activities. One
of the most sophisticated and effective ways used has been to operate a network of
international non-profit organizations (NPOs), which enables them to generate and
transfer funds easily from any part of the world to an intended target area where
investment or procurement opportunities exist. These NPOs act as effective fronts
and also enable these terrorist entities to gain legitimacy. This deliberate siphoning
of funds from well developed, more regulated economies to more porous, less
I
3
regulated ones poses a serious terrorist financing threat. Recently a UK-based
charity, Green Crescent, was found supporting and funding militant activities in
Bangladesh. The charity is headed by a UK-based Bangladeshi expatriate, Faisal
Mostafa who is suspected of links with Jammat-ul Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB),
an Islamist militant group.
One of the terrorist groups most adept at using NPOs is the Liberation Tigers of Tamil
Eelam (LTTE). The LTTE is an ethno-nationalist Tamil separatist movement battling
for the establishment of a separate Tamil state in North and East Sri Lanka. The
Tamil diaspora emerged primarily as an aftermath of civil war and race riots of the
1970s and 1980s in Sri Lanka which led to large-scale emigration. The Tamil diaspora
currently scattered throughout the world numbers around 800,000, and their
biggest concentration is primarily based in United Kingdom, India, Canada, Australia,
Germany and Switzerland. Jane’s Intelligence Review report by John Solomon and
BC Tan of World-Check indicate that the LTTE raises about 80-90 percent of their
total finances from overseas. The report estimates total revenue LTTE raises is around
claim 300 million dollars a year through its legitimate and illegitimate businesses
and fronts. Donations to LTTE’s vast and sophisticated network of NPOs have played
a major role in funneling this money back home to fund the separatist struggle. One
such NPO is the Tamils Rehabilitation Organization (TRO), which has offices in many
countries such as the UK, Canada, Australia, Sri Lanka. In the aftermath of the 2004
Asian Tsunami, certain NPOs, such as the TRO, raised millions of dollars, a majority of
which reportedly went into the funding of the LTTE.
Since 9/11 has inevitably resulted in a closer look at these NPOs and their sources
of funding. Raising funds abroad and channeling them back has become tougher.
However, support from the diaspora and their contributions and support will
continue to play a significant role in financing of terror activities.
Criminal Activities
The criminal activities in South Asia like theft, money laundering, bank robberies,
kidnapping for ransom, are another source of channeling funds to the militants. A
major case in point is the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), which is engaged in several
criminal acts, such as looting, taxing locals in FATA and the NWFP in addition to bank
robberies and kidnappings for ransom. In August 2008, Pakistani law enforcement
agencies disrupted a financial racket of TTP which was operating in Karachi with
the help of Lashkar-i-Jhangi and other militant outfits. The outfits were involved in
bank robberies, robbing people who had withdrawn cash from banks and security
firms and kidnapping for ransom. It is also reported that these groups train and
then recruit people in security firms, banks and money changer firms to meet their
financial needs, which poses a direct threat to the banking industry in the country.
The TTP is also forcibly taking over marble and emerald mines in NWFP and FATA and
raise considerable finances from these sources, which poses a threat to legitimate
businessmen involved in this industry.
4
The Indian separatist group in the Northeast, ULFA, has used extortion since its
inception in 1979 from major business groups, oil exploration firms and tea business
firms. Apart from these major entities, there are also reports of ULFA expanding its
extortion base to include petty traders, villagers and salaried people, demanding
regular payments in small increments.
Narco Trade
The cultivation of Narcotics is also an important source of terror financing in South
Asia. While Afghanistan’s flourishing opium cultivation and its large scale funding
of the Taliban and other anti-governmental organizations is widely known, terrorist
entities such as the Maoists in India and the LTTE in Sri Lanka have also benefitted
greatly from this profitable business. It takes shape both in the form of direct
cultivation by the militants as well as charging a tax from people who cultivate it in
return for “protection.”
The Naxalites are regarded as one of the most deadly internal security threats facing
India. Their connection with narcotics cultivation is well documented. According
to the Narcotics Control Bureau in India, the Naxals thrive on money earned
through illicit cultivation. A report they released in 2007 found out that of the total
marijuana seized in the country, a disproportionately high percentage of it came
from the Maoist controlled pockets in the states of Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra,
Chhattisgarh and Andhra Pradesh. These states are affected deeply by the Naxalite
violence. Prakash Jaiswal, then minister of state for home affairs in India, informed
the government in April 2008 that cannabis cultivation and its trade has become
a source of finance for the Naxals in Andhra Pradesh, Bihar, Jharkhand and Orissa.
He further stated that Maoists get “protection money” from narcotics traders who
engage in trafficking and also safe passage money from narcotics smugglers.
The LTTE’s connection with narcotics is less substantiated. But it is often accused of
heroin trafficking in the Golden Crescent and Golden Triangle regions to countries
including India, Sri Lanka, Canada, Germany, Italy, France, Scandinavian countries,
Myanmar and Thailand. The earlier cited Jane’s Intelligence Review report indicates
that a portion of the drug market in Montreal amounting to US $1 billion is controlled
by Sri Lankan expatriates, having links to the LTTE.
Hawala or Hundi
Till now we have focused on the main sources of raising funds for terror activities.
South Asia, unlike more advanced and regulated western economies, is also famous
for a less regulated informal value transfer system or Hawala transactions. Hawala
transaction or hundi system is one another important channel through which
terrorists and their sympathizers move money across the globe. Pakistan, India, and
the Persian Gulf states are home to the largest concentration of Hawala transactions.
According to 2002 statistics, Pakistani officials estimate that over $5 billion in
5
transactions take place through hawala networks every year. A recent US State
Department report by Assistant US Secretary of State for International Narcotics and
Law Enforcement Affairs, David T Johnson, has revealed that remittances to India
sent through legal, formal channels in 2007-2008 amounted to USD 42.6 billion, of
which 30–40 percent of transactions were carried out through hawala. The report
suspects that some of these transactions are directly linked to terrorist financing in
India.
In October 2008 the Mumbai police Crime Branch found out that the Indian
Mujahideen, a militant group in India, was receiving money from the Gulf countries
through the hawala networks and the Western Union Money Transfer. Similarly
Kashmir-based separatist groups such as Hizbul Mujahideen (HM) and LeT are also
suspected of using hawala transaction as a source to fund their activities.
Conclusion
Terrorist financing in South Asia remains a key dimension of the larger struggle to
counter terrorism in the region. Although there has been a growing awareness
about sources of terrorist funding and efforts have been made to enact regulation
to counter it, there is much more to do. There are regulations and initiatives by states
to keep a strong vigil on various businesses in an attempt to stop terrorist financing
at its source. But without adequate understanding of the terrorist groups, their
funding techniques and where they operate, laws and their enforcement will likely
fail to be effective. The unprecedented 9/11 attacks have dramatically shown the
international community the need for a stronger response to stop the financing of
militant groups. South Asia has become an epicenter of terrorism and insurgency.
Therefore all initiatives and responses should take a hard look at how South Asian
groups raise funds and what more can be done to stop them.

Sunday, October 11, 2009

CRIME

FACT FILE: CRIME
Background/History
A crime can be the act of violating or breaking a law, but it can also be the intention or attempt to
break the law that is punished, e.g. conspiracy to commit an act of terrorism or attempted rape.
A crime is seen as an offense against society, and therefore it is the state that has to investigate and
punish the criminal, as well as defend society from criminals and support victims of crime.
There is some variation in what is seen as a criminal act, for example in some countries adultery is
seen as an immoral act, yet in others it is punishable by death, as in Nigeria and some other Muslim
countries.
Lying can be seen as immoral, yet it is not criminal unless it falls under the category of slander, which
is a crime.
In some countries in Africa, crime rates are very high.
Examples of crimes – there are a lot of things that you can do wrong!
* Arson * assault * blackmail * burglary
* child abuse * domestic violence * drug possession * weapon possession
* embezzlement * espionage * forgery * genocide
* hacking * identity theft * illegal gambling * kidnapping
* looting * manslaughter * murder * perjury
* prostitution * rape * robbery * slander
* smuggling * stalking * tax evasion * theft
* treason * trespass * vandalism
The Facts
Crime and Youth:
Youth crime is a big concern in Africa, particularly when over 2/3 of the population in cities is
between 12 and 25.
In 1992, the African Union estimated that there were about 16 million street children in Africa. That
figure was expected to be 32 million by 2000.
The number of street children in Zambia went from 35,000 to 70,000 between 1991 and 1994, while in
Nairobi it went from 4500 to 30,000 in the same 3 year period.
The Othandweni project in Johannesburg, South Africa, was started to empower the street children
1
and youth of Johannesburg through four projects: basic care and human rights, health care, sport
and recreation and entrepreneurial training. The project reaches an average of 600 youths a month.
Violence against Women and Children
According to Human Rights Watch, violence against women and children is widely recognized as a
serious concern in South Africa. The South African government has introduced a new Sexual
Offences Bill to make existing laws better. Police continue to receive training in handling rape cases.
Specialized courts are being established, yet conviction rates remain low. In a country where one
quarter of adults are HIV-positive, rape can mean a death sentence. In April 2002, the government
pledged to provide rape survivors antiretroviral drugs, but government inaction, misinformation and
delays in handing out the antiretroviral drugs continues to impede access to this lifesaving program.
Children, an estimated 40 percent of rape and attempted rape survivors, are especially harmed by
government failure to address their needs.
Children in Detention
According to international law child offenders should not be put in jail unless as a last resort, but in
South Africa the number of juveniles in detention facilities- mostly jails - awaiting trial are currently
at more than two thousand. While in some cases juveniles are held separately from adults, this is not
always the case, leaving them particularly vulnerable to sexual abuse, violence, and gang related
activities.
Whilst the number of cases of murder and rape in South Africa are amongst the highest per capita,
there is a decline in the figures. But unfortunately there is a rise in the number of reported assaults
and robberies.
Child Rape
An appalling epidemic of child rape is emerging in sub-Saharan Africa. This region, roughly the lower
one-third of the African continent, is all ready being decimated by AIDS. Now recent crime statistics
reveal a growing epidemic of rape involving young children.
According to a recent report by the South Africa Police Service, children (under the age of 18) are
the victims of 41 percent of all reported rapes and attempted rapes. Even more disturbing is the fact
that over 15 percent of the total reported rapes are against children under 11 years of age. In the year
2000, an average of 58 children were raped every single day.
21,538 rapes and attempted rapes against children reported in 2000. This marks a dramatic 300% rise in
reported cases from 1994 (7,559 cases reported). However, despite this staggering increase in reported
child rape, authorities believe that a large percentage of incidents still go unreported.
The AIDS epidemic has left an unprecedented number of children parentless and vulnerable to
abuse. Henry Nel, executive director of the ROCK of Africa Mission in Zimbabwe, states, "We are
seeing a tragic devaluation in the lives of little children. The life of a precious little girl is becoming
mere medicine for a dying man."
2
A hate crime (bias crime),
loosely defined, is a crime committed because of the perpetrator's prejudices. This is a controversial
political issue within the US. The U.S. Congress (HR 4797 - 1992) defined a hate crime as: "[a
crime in which] the defendant's conduct was motivated by hatred, bias, or prejudice, based on the
actual or perceived race, color, religion, national origin, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation or
gender identity of another individual or group of individuals." In 1994, the Violent Crime Control
and Law Enforcement Act added disabilities to the above list.
In the last decade of the 20th century, U.S. legislation in many states has established harsher penalties
for a number of crimes when they are also considered hate crimes; interestingly, however, very
few of these statutes make it more likely for a murder to trigger the death penalty when it is found to
have also been a hate crime. While some claim that these hate crimes laws exist because women and
certain minorities have been victims and require special protection, others say that they exist because
crimes motivated by hate deserve a harsher punishment.
A Pennsylvania legislator active in creating the classification of hate crime in Pennsylvania, and then
expanding that classification to crimes against homosexuals, Rep. Mark B. Cohen of Philadelphia,
said:
“Hate crimes deserve to be taken even more seriously than ordinary crimes because they
victimize all they threaten as well as all they directly harm”
Current Events
The International Criminal Court (ICC) was started on 17 July 1998, it is the first ever permanent,
treaty based, international criminal court established to promote the rule of law and ensure that the
gravest international crimes do not go unpunished.
3
Case Study:
Issues facing South Africa
In some countries in Africa, crime rates are very high. High crime rates are fuelled by growing
poverty and inequality. Homicides tripled in Sub-Saharan Africa in the 1980’s.
It has become increasingly clear to economists that large-scale political and criminal violence
threatens to relegate several countries and regions of the developing world to a perpetual trap of
poverty and slow or negative economic growth.
Lots of people think of South Africa when they think of crime in Africa. This is because it's got
one of the highest crime rates in the world.
South Africa used to be ruled by a small group of white people who made black people live by strict
rules, even though the huge majority of the country is black.
This system, called apartheid, ended in 1994. But there was loads of violence and crime because of
the unfair system.
People hoped there'd be less crime after apartheid ended, but it hasn't really happened. Loads of
violent crimes have actually gone up.
4
Sudans Death Penalty
Intisar Bakri Abdulgader gave birth to a child in September after becoming pregnant outside marriage.
She was convicted of adultery and sentenced by a local court in the Khartoum suburb of
Kalakla in July when she was seven months pregnant. The sentence was upheld by the appeal court
in August. The alleged father of the child has reportedly not been charged but will have a blood
test to establish paternity.
Following the postponement of the punishment from 20 December to 23 January due to the girl's
poor health, Amnesty International is also asking people all over the world to write to the Sudanese
authorities asking them to stop the punishment going ahead.
Intisar is caring for her four-month-old son, Dori. She is said to be very frightened at the prospect
of the punishment and is reportedly eating and sleeping very little.
Under article 146 of Sudan's Penal Code, adultery is punishable by execution by stoning if the offender
is married, or by one hundred lashes if the offender is not married. Adultery is defined as
sexual intercourse with a man without being lawfully bound to him. Although the penal codes are
based on an interpretation of Islamic law everyone in the north of Sudan is subject to them. Intisar's
family are Christians from the south of Sudan who fled to the north to escape fighting near
their home.
Amnesty International UK Media Director Lesley Warner said: "The Sudanese authorities must not
carry out this vicious sentence on a young girl.
"It is a cruel punishment which completely contravenes basic international human rights law, to
which Sudan is a party. The authorities should abolish all these cruel punishments now."
Scores of people were sentenced to amputation or flogging in Sudan last year. Flogging is frequently
carried out immediately after sentencing leaving no chance for appeal, even when there are concerns
about whether a fair trial has been held.
The Sudanese Penal Code, which is partly based on interpretation of Islamic legal doctrines, allows
for penalties including flogging and amputations. Under Sudanese law, all who live in northern Sudan,
whether Muslim or Christian (like Intisar Bakri Abdulgader), fall under the penalties of the Sudanese
Penal Code's interpretation of religious law. The use of religious law is an issue of contention
in the ongoing peace negotiations between the Sudanese government and rebels in the
South.
(AI article)
5
Kenya on Rape
The report: Kenya. Rape - the invisible crime - looks at violence, particularly sexual violence,
against women and focuses on rape committed by both security officials and private individuals. It
examines why women subjected to violence are inadequately protected by the law and why those
who commit violence against women continue to operate with impunity.
Its conclusion is rather sobering. Every day, women are physically and sexually abused in all social
and ethnic groups all over Kenya. It is a crime that shocks and traumatises the victim, and undermines
the status of women in society. Yet, it is largely suffered in silence.
Victims of rape often face insurmountable obstacles in trying to bring perpetrators to justice.
Many women who have been victims of rape or other forms of sexual abuse are too intimidated by
certain cultural attitudes and state inaction to seek redress. To do so can often lead to hostility
from the family, the community and the police, with little hope of success. Those who do seek justice
are confronted by a system that ignores, denies and even condones violence against women,
and protects perpetrators, whether they are state officials or private individuals," Amnesty international
said.
Amnesty International believes that acts of violence against women constitute torture for which
the state is accountable when they are of such nature and severity envisaged by the concept of
torture in international standards and the state has failed to fulfill its obligation to provide effective
protection, investigation and prosecution.
"Rape is torture when the state has failed in its responsibilities to protect, investigate and provide
redress to women victims. The Kenyan government should reform both its laws and practices to
end impunity for violence against women, and to conform with its obligations under international
humanitarian law," Amnesty International said.
The government has consistently stated its intention to promote gender equality through legislation,
but has failed to implement constitutional provisions, failed to incorporate into domestic law
any of the international instruments that it has ratified and that promote and protect women's
rights.
The Penal Code does not recognise marital rape as a criminal offence because of the presumption,
especially in criminal law, that consent to sexual intercourse is given by the act of marriage. No legal
challenge to this presumption has been made through the courts in Kenya. The lesser charge of
assault is more commonly used in marital rape cases, carrying with it a lower maximum sentence.
"Despite its moral and legal obligations, the government has not reformed Kenya's laws to make all
acts of violence against women criminal offences, nor has it addressed the discriminatory practices
of the police force, prisons services and court system, It is the failure of the state to take action
against such abuses, whether they are committed by state officials or private individuals, that
allows them to continue and operate with impunity. The state has a responsibility to take action in
order to protect women from continuing violence, Amnesty International said.
6
Among the cases raised in Amnesty International's report are those of Mary, Agnes and Louise
who all have several things in common. They have each been badly beaten by men in their families.
They each say they have been raped by those men. They have suffered for years with no prospect
of help from the authorities. The police are unwilling to become involved in cases of domestic violence
and are biased against women, particularly poor women, and there are no state facilities to
protect women fleeing domestic violence.
While women's achievements are being celebrated all over the world on International Women's Day
today, women who continue to be raped and beaten and denied their basic rights - whether by
state officials or family members - must not be forgotten.
"The year 2002 will see both presidential and legislative elections in Kenya. Members of parliament,
voters and women in Kenya should do everything in their power to make women's rights a top priority
on the election agenda and ensure that candidates are gender-sensitive in both their policies and
attitudes," the organisation said.
(AI article)
7
Move to ban small arms in Africa
Small arms make ethnic conflicts more deadly
Countries in East and Central Africa may move to ban the civilian ownership of small arms in a bid to
fight insecurity in the region.
It is estimated that there are 100 million illicit small arms in Africa, crippling development in many areas
of the continent.
Some countries like Kenya and Tanzania have blamed the increase in violent crimes on the small arms
that are smuggled into their countries.
However, a United Nations report earlier this year accused Somalia's neighbours of breaking an arms
embargo on the war-torn country.
The BBC's Cathy Jenkins in Nairobi says measure being considered at a conference on the trade in
small arms in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi, are:
· Plans to enhance the capacity of police, customs and border guards
· The prohibition of the civilian ownership of all light weapons, semi-automatic rifles and machine
guns.
Delegates to the Nairobi conference were reminded of just how devastating the proliferation of small
arms has been for their countries.
A summary of the consequences described how the sub-region has been ravaged by the easy availability
of light weapons which are used in inter-ethnic conflicts, by urban criminals, and by cattle-rustlers.
Daunting task
Some areas are no-go areas for development workers, thus depriving whole communities of muchneeded
help.
And the majority of victims are women, the elderly and children.
Kenya's Foreign Minister Marsden Madoka told delegates that the task was a daunting one and that
their respective governments had to demonstrate unwavering political determination to follow
through initiatives.
He said it was crucial that the conference came up with concrete proposals to eradicate the problem.
Observers from civil society agreed with the urgency of his message.
Haruun Ruun of the New Sudan Council of Churches said that unnecessary suffering had to come
to an end, so that people and communities could develop.
8
Two years ago, the countries of the Great Lakes region and the Horn of Africa launched an initiative
to combat the problem of small arms trafficking.
This week's conference has been called to review the steps taken so far.
Statistics
Figure 1: Number of violent crimes per 100 000, selected African countries
The 1997 Interpol report provides crime data for nine sub-Saharan countries only (including South
Africa). The per capita crime rate for the major violent crimes of murder, rape, and robbery and
violent theft was substantially higher in South Africa than in the other eight sub-Saharan countries.
South Africa also had the highest per capita serious assault rate (541 per 100 000 of the population),
9
but this was closely followed by Namibia (497 per 100 000).
Figure 2: Number of property crimes per 100 000, selected African countries
The Interpol figures also indicate that, of the nine listed sub-Saharan countries, South Africa had
the highest per capita levels of theft, in general, and vehicle theft specifically. Care needs to be taken
when comparing South Africa’s vehicle theft figures with that of other sub-Saharan countries,
however. According to the Interpol figures, the per capita level of vehicle theft in South Africa (248
per 100 000 of the population) was almost four times as high as in the second worst affected country,
Swaziland (70 per 100 000). Given South Africa’s relative wealth and economic dominance in the
region, it is likely that there are substantially more cars in South Africa than in other sub-Saharan
countries.
In respect of burglary, Swaziland had the highest level in 1997 (810 cases per 100 000 of the
10
population), followed by South Africa (780 cases per 100 000), and Namibia (580 cases per 100 000).
VICTIMS OF CRIME SURVEY
Police crime statistics are generally considered to be the most accessible source of information on
how many crimes are committed in a country. However, police records contain only information on
crimes which are reported to and recorded or uncovered by the police. For a number of reasons, such
information is not sufficient. Because of inadequate recording practices and political agendas, crime
statistics sometimes reflect only the police’s performance in recording crimes. Moreover, some crimes
are reported but not recorded. This happens when victims call the police and the police judge the
crime as not sufficiently serious to warrant its recording.4
Crime victims do not report crimes for a number of reasons.5 The propensity to report crimes is likely
to differ from country to country and by type of crime. Generally, for serious property-related crimes
- especially where the stolen property is insured - the reporting rate is high. However, for some violent
offences - especially sexual offences - reporting rates tend to be low.
The general tendency is for people to report the more serious property crimes.
"In most cases, after a simple cost-benefit assessment, victims consider that the small loss is not
worth the burden of going to the police station, filling in forms and answering questions which are
sometimes perceived to be embarrassing."6
Victim surveys seek to overcome the phenomenon of underreporting of crime and the fact that the
police do not record all crimes which are brought to their attention. Ideally, victim survey results
should be read in conjunction with official crime statistics:
"Victimisation surveys do not cover all types of crime and they can only reveal so much about trends
in crime over a longer period of time. To get a fuller picture, the results must be supplemented by
data from other sources. UN statistics on officially recorded crime and UN victim survey data, taken
together, provide important information about crime trends at a comparative cross-national level."7
In 1996-97, the United Nations Interregional Crime and Justice Research Institute (UNICRI)
conducted victim surveys in 17 countries of the developing world.8 Seven of these countries are in
Africa, six in Latin America and four in Asia.9 The respondents were generally drawn from the
population of the largest cities in the selected countries. Respondents were asked about their
victimisation experiences over a one-year period preceding the survey.
Overall, the selected Asian countries consistently ranked the lowest for all types of crime, while
African and Latin American countries had the highest victimisation rates for all types of crime. All
regions were mostly affected by theft (7% in Asia and 13% in Africa and Latin America over a one-year
period), while victimisation rates for all other types of crime were lower.10
11
VIOLENT CRIME
According to the 1996-97 UNICRI victim survey, for the crime type of sexual assault (which includes
rape, attempted rape and indecent assault, but excludes offensive behaviour), Ugandans indicated
the highest level of victimisation of 4.5% over a one-year period. This was followed by Egyptians (3.1%)
and South Africans (2.3%). Victimisation levels in respect of sexual assault were the lowest in
Botswana (0.8%). African levels of sexual assault compared favourably with some Latin American
countries. For example, Brazil had 8% and Colombia 5%. Asian levels, however, were the lowest.
Figure 3: Violent crime, selected African countries
Robbery was the highest in Tunisia (6.3%), followed by Zimbabwe (4.8%) and South Africa (4.6%).11 As
with sexual assault, Botswana had the lowest victimisation level for robbery (2%) of the six African
12
countries surveyed. Some Latin American victimisation levels were again higher for robbery: Brazil
had 11.3% and Colombia 10.6%.
‘Assault with force’ victimisation levels were the highest in Zimbabwe (6.7%) followed by South Africa
(5.6%) and Botswana (3.7%).12
For the ‘assault with force’ category, most of the surveyed African countries registered higher
victimisation rates than Latin American countries, with surveyed Asian countries registering the
lowest victimisation levels.
Sometimes, the offenders used a weapon to commit robberies, assaults and sexual assaults.13 Overall,
weapons were used more frequently in the developing world than in the other regions surveyed for
the commission of these crimes.
Among the African countries surveyed, South African victims were the most likely to state that the
offender used a weapon in the sexual assault (37.1% of sexual assaults), and robbery (73.3%). Tanzania
had the highest incidence of assault where a weapon was used (70.4%) followed by South Africa
(62.9%). In all other African countries surveyed, less than half of the assaults involved the use of a
weapon.14
Figure 4: Proportion of violent crimes committed with weapons
Victims of assault were asked whether they suffered personal injuries as a result of the aggression
13
perpetrated against them. The seriousness of the injuries can be gauged by the need of victims to ask
for a doctor’s assistance after the incident.
In Tanzania, 53.9% of assault victims were injured and 32% saw a doctor. This was followed by South
Africa where 43% of assault victims were injured and 31.7% consulted a doctor. In all other African
countries surveyed, the injury rate was lower as was the propensity of assault victims to see a doctor
after the incident. The injury rate was also generally lower in the Asian and Latin American countries
surveyed compared to the African countries.15
PROPERTY CRIMES
According to the 1996-97 UNICRI victim survey, Tanzanians experienced the highest levels of
victimisation with regard to burglary and attempted burglary. Thus, 19% of the Tanzanian survey
respondents stated that they had been a victim of a burglary, and 12.9% said that they had fallen
victim of an attempted burglary over a one-year period.
According to the survey, South Africa had one of the lowest risks of burglary and attempted
burglary compared to the other surveyed African countries: 6.3% and 3.7% of South Africans stated
that they had been the victim of, respectively, a burglary or attempted burglary over a one-year
period.
Figure 5: Burglary and attempted burglary, African countries
14
Actual theft during burglaries happened more frequently in developing countries than in the rest of
the world. In poorer areas, stolen goods typically include money, food and inexpensive household
items such as clothing or linen, which are most probably stolen for the personal use of the burglar.
In wealthier areas where homeowners generally keep their money in a bank and other valuable items in
safes, burglars tend to take what is available and give preference to objects which are easily resold. In
this respect, the most frequently stolen objects are those that are easier to place on the market of
stolen goods, such as electrical appliances, television sets and radios.
15
Figure 6: Proportion of burglaries involving theft or damage
"The difference in objects stolen between affluent and poor regions is opportunity determined, in
terms of the type of objects available, or the level of protection. Furthermore, the level of protection
determines the damage involved in breaking into the house, which is also an indicator of the degree of
difficulty that the burglar has to face in committing the offence. It is therefore clear that behind
burglaries in well or poorly protected houses, there will be different cost-effectiveness calculations
that will take into account whether the prospective target is worth the risk involved in committing
the crime."16
Of all the African countries surveyed, South African burglary victims were the most likely to state
that something had been stolen (94.9% of burglaries), or that damage had been caused (62.6% of
burglaries). In fact, in this respect South Africa experienced the highest level of damages occurring
during the course of a burglary of all 17 developing countries surveyed. In respect of objects being
stolen during the course of a burglary, South Africa was placed second after India.
16
The UNICRI survey also asked vehicle owners whether any of their household vehicles (including
trucks and vans) had been stolen (vehicles taken away for the purposes of ‘joyriding’ were included in
the question).
South Africans indicated the highest level of vehicle thefts with 7.6% of surveyed vehicle owners
indicating that one of their household vehicles had been stolen. This was followed by Uganda (5.9%)
and Tanzania (5.8%).
In respect of theft from a vehicle (such as, for example, a car radio or money left lying inside a
vehicle), Tanzanians indicated that they were the worst affected with just over a quarter of vehicle
owners indicating that something has been stolen from one of their household vehicles over a oneyear
period. This was followed by Zimbabwe (21.2%) and Tunisia (17.8%). Among South African
respondents, only 14% of vehicle owners stated that one of their household vehicles had something
stolen from it.
An important indicator of the nature of vehicle theft and of the efficiency of the police’s response
to this type of crime is the data on vehicle recovery rates. It can be argued that a high recovery rate
indicates that vehicles are stolen for joy-riding purposes. This might explain why vehicle recovery rates
are very high in industrialised countries (84% in North America and 74% in Western Europe). "The
recovery rate in the developing world is much lower than in the industrialised world which,
comparatively speaking, indicates both lower levels of efficiency in recovery and less joy-riding."17
Among the African countries surveyed Zimbabwe had the lowest recovery rate (30.2% of stolen
vehicles recovered), followed by South Africa (45.8%). In all the other surveyed African countries,
more than half of the stolen vehicles were recovered.
OTHER CRIMES
Apart from the types of crime which have been dealt with so far, other forms of victimisation
covered by the UNICRI victim survey included vehicle vandalism, theft of a motorcycle, theft of a
bicycle, theft of personal property and assault without force. During the year preceding the
interviews, approximately a quarter of the respondents from all participating countries experienced
at least one of these types of victimisation.
17
Figure 7: Theft of and from vehicles, African countries
If all these crimes are taken together, Zimbabweans experienced the highest level of victimisation
(32.7%) of the seven African countries surveyed. This was followed by Uganda (28.9%) and Tanzania
(28.2%). South Africa was in the middle with 19.8%. South Africa experienced relatively high levels of
assault without force (5.2%), second only to Zimbabwe (8.7%).
Taking the category of ‘other crimes’ together, the surveyed African countries compared poorly to
the Asian countries which generally registered considerably lower victimisation rates. A number of
Latin American countries, however, had the highest victimisation rates of all the countries surveyed.
For example, Colombia had the highest with 35.1% followed by Argentina (30.7%).18
18
Figure 8: Other crime, African countries
19
20
Fear of Crime
21
The UNICRI survey asked respondents whether they felt very safe, fairly safe, a bit unsafe or very
unsafe in the street after dark. Of all the African countries surveyed (and all Latin American and
Asian countries), South Africans were the most likely group to say that they felt very unsafe in the
street after dark (39.6%). After Botswana (7.4%), South Africa was the country where the fewest
respondents felt very safe (14.3%).
Figure 9: Feeling unsafe after dark, African countries
22
A further question gauging people’s fear of crime was whether they avoided places when going out
after dark. Among the Africans countries surveyed, Zimbabwe had the highest proportion of
respondents stating that they avoided places when going out after dark (56.7%), followed by Egypt
(54.4%) and South Africa (51.7%).
A third question seeking to measure the fear of crime asked respondents whether they felt that a
burglary was likely to occur in their household in the next year. Respondents in Botswana were most
likely to state that a burglary was very likely in their household in the next 12 months (26.6%), followed
by South Africans (25.1%), and Tanzanians (23.3%).19
POLICING LEVELS
It is sobering to realise that levels of policing in a country have a limited impact on crime levels only.
Generally, developed states have a favourable police to population ratio. For example, in Italy the
ratio is 1:102. That is, for every uniformed police officer or detective there are 102 people living in
Italy. Portugal has a ratio of 1:225 and Germany of 1:315.
In South Africa, there is one police officer for every 408 people. However, some developed countries
have a police to population ratio which is not as favourable as South Africa’s. For example, in Canada
the ratio is 1:552 and in New Zealand, 1:557, yet the levels of serious violent crime in these countries
are significantly lower than in South Africa.
23
Figure 10: Number of residents per police officer
However, compared to more developed countries, South Africa’s civilian to police officer ratio does
not reveal the full picture. While the South African Police Service (SAPS) is large, with 105 000
uniformed police officers and detectives, the service’s effectiveness is hampered by a number of
factors:20
· South Africa has a high crime rate, especially in respect of serious and violent crime. The investigation
of such crimes consume considerable police resources.
· South Africa has a relatively youthful population. In 1996, over 44% of the country’s population
was under the age of 20.21 Young people commit more crime than adults - especially violent
crime.22
· South Africa is geographically large with the result that police resources are thinly spread in
the country’s rural areas.
· South Africa has a rapidly urbanising population. The anonymity provided by expanding cities
and the unstructured terrain of the growing number of informal settlements make effective
policing difficult.
24
· Many officers in the SAPS are poorly trained. According to the previous national police commissioner,
George Fivaz, a quarter of all police officers are ‘functionally illiterate’. Moreover,
34 800 have only ten years of schooling or less, and over 8 000 do not have a driver’s licence.23
South Africa’s police to population ratio compares favourably to that of many developing states —
especially sub-Saharan countries. While South Africa has a police to population ratio of 1:408,
Tanzania has a ratio of 1:998 and Malawi of 1: 1 830.24
ALL CRIME - British Crime Survey data
25
CONCLUSION
In terms of crimes reported to the police, South Africa has extraordinary high levels of violent crime
— both by global and by African standards. Moreover, in respect of property crime — especially
vehicle theft — South Africa has one of the highest levels of crime among sub-Saharan states for
which figures are available.
However, when victim survey results are analysed, this picture changes. In respect of violent crime
South Africa’s crime levels are high but not the highest when compared to a number of other African
countries. It is striking, however, that South African victims of violent crime are more likely to be
attacked or threatened with a weapon compared to the victims of all the surveyed African countries.
Not surprisingly, South African assault victims are very likely to suffer serious injuries.
In respect of property crimes, South Africans fall somewhere in the middle in relation to other
African countries surveyed by UNICRI. However, in respect of burglary, South African victims were
the most likely to suffer some loss through burglary, while South African vehicle theft victims are —
after their Zimbabwean counterparts — the least likely to have their vehicle recovered by the police.
It is undeniable that levels of crime in South Africa are high by global and African levels — especially
in respect of violent crime. It would seem, however, that in respect of a number of violent crimes and
most property crimes, South Africans are less likely to be victimised than many Africans inhabiting a
number of countries on the rest of the continent.
Glossary of useful terms
Antiretroviral drugs: medicine used to reduce the chances of contracting the HIV virus.
‘Treaty based’: An agreement by 2 or more countries to abide by some laws that they have agreed to.
The most famous 2 international treaties are the International Covenant of Civil and Political Rights
(ICCPR) which contains rules about torture, capital punishment etc, and the International Covenant
of Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR) which contains rules about health, religion and
family. Most countries who are members of the UN have signed these two treaties.

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