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Financing Terrorism: Show Me The Money

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Financing terrorism: Show me the money

KARACHI: Pakistan seems to lack a counter-terrorism strategy that cuts off the financial blood line of militants, analysts say.

“Our strategy seems to be focused only on bombing Waziristan,” says analyst Zahid Hussain. “No one is focusing on cutting off the supply lines of militants.”

Amir Rana, director of the Pakistan Institute for Peace Studies, agrees. “The Pakistan Army and law enforcement agencies need to tackle this problem head on if they’re serious about dismantling the firepower of terrorists.”

The money trail

There are two basic funding channels for the militants. First, there are the established infrastructures of money generation such as charity collected through Zakat, madrassas and mosques, businesses and revenue earned through shops built around these places of worship, the collection of animal hides and remittances sent from overseas Pakistanis.

Only a fraction of the funds comes from this channel, increasing dependence on the other source: income through criminal activities such as bank robberies, kidnapping for ransom, banditry, illegal taxation and drugs.

According to Omar Shahid, SSP of the anti-extremism cell of the Sindh police’s Crime Investigation Department, apart from one or two Saudi or other Gulf princes who may be funding terrorists in an individual capacity, there’s no evidence that foreign states are funding homegrown militants.

“The problem is more localised now,” Shahid says, adding that the main source comes through Pakistani people, most of whom unwittingly contribute to militant funds through charity.

However, Hussain says that money through charities from Gulf countries especially find its way into the wrong hands. Just four or five years ago, this charity was close to Rs90 billion. “Now where does all that money end up?” he asked.

A major chunk is collected through Zakat money from Karachi and Faisalabad, says Rana. Hussain substantiates that view. “One can take the example of Lal Masjid in Islamabad, which was funded by various prominent businessmen,” he said.

Cost of a suicide jacket

Shahid’s unit recently caught a teenaged suicide bomber, armed with a suicide jacket, and two of his handlers in Karachi who were allegedly affiliated with the Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan. “The handlers covered their operational costs through collection of hides in the name of a madrassa,” Shahid said.

Commenting on the cost of making a suicide jacket, he said it doesn’t require a lot of money to make the device. “It costs anywhere between Rs50,000 and Rs100,000

Illegal taxes

Also, during Eid, Mehsud tribesmen living in Karachi are forced to pay ‘bhatta’ in the name of donations for fighters in Waziristan. “Last Eid, we received reports that ‘parchiyaan’ (tickets) were collected from each trader in Sohrab Goth (in Karachi) for this purpose,” Shahid said.

“There are many layers to collection of funds in tribal areas. For example, if one group of militants collects money through criminal activities in Darra Adam Khel then another collects illegal taxes in Bajaur, etc,” Rana said.

According to Hussain, using drug money to finance terrorism is more of a phenomenon in Afghanistan. However, Rana says that in Pakistan, the smuggling route used to transfer drugs and other illicit items is taxed by militants operating in those areas.

Lack of training

The Pakistan Army and local law enforcement agencies, including police and rangers, are neither trained nor look deep into the financial trail of a terror-related crime. Even though intelligence agencies keep a tap on militant networks, the bulk of their operations is limited to wire-tapping and intercepting militant conversations.

Director-General of the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) Waseem Ahmad insists that his organisation has a counter-terrorism wing that includes a section on financing. “We monitor all home remittances coming into the country through money exchange and wire services like the Western Union,” he said.

Ahmad said that the FIA has also stayed in touch with international policing bodies like Interpol to liaison requests to monitor certain suspicious transactions. The FIA does all this in close coordination with the financial monitoring unit (FMU) that comes under the finance ministry and whose offices are located in the State Bank of Pakistan building in Karachi. Ahmad said that all the people housed in the unit are professionals with expertise in economics and forensics.

Hawala system

According to Ahmad, despite “strict” checks and pressures to monitor the illegal hawala system of sending remittances home, he was informed in an exclusive presentation recently that around 10,000 people or locations are still available in the country from where such illegal transactions take place.

More than four million Pakistani migrants are estimated to be living abroad, 47 per cent of whom are believed to be in the Middle East. According to a State Bank report, $7 billion flow into the country through hawala channels each year.

According to a private banker in Karachi, most people such as daily wagers in the Middle East find the hawala to be a hassle-free system that offers better rates than most exchange companies. Also, she pointed out, people forget about money transfers taking place within the country. “Keep in mind that one doesn’t need a large amount of money to carry out a suicide attack. Say, a group wants to carry out a single suicide mission in the city under the budget of Rs100,000, money could be sent from Islamabad or Peshawar through new schemes using fake NIC numbers,” she added.

Grey areas?

Rana stressed that more investigation is required to monitor the huge amounts of money that get pumped through stock exchange markets such as the Karachi Stock Exchange (KSE).

It has been alleged that various powerful stockbrokers in the country, working on behalf of criminal syndicates and underworld dons, use the stock markets to convert black money into white. Reportedly, much of this money also lands into coffers of militants and their sympathisers.

When asked whether he was looking into scams involving the KSE, the FIA chief said “we are still looking into this.”

Published in The Express Tribune, November 10th, 2010.



Financing terrorism: Show me the money – The Express Tribune
 
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Funds for terror

By Huma Yusuf

The ongoing fight against militancy along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border has been hijacked by charged rhetoric, conspiracy theories and competing interests. Consume enough media, and it begins to seem like the great game that many say it is -- a blame game, a game of chance, a guessing game.

But far too frequently one is reminded of the very real consequences and immense human toll of this twisted `game`. Friday’s attacks in Darra Adamkhel) and outside Peshawar were the most recent reminders in this vein.


Scores, including children, were killed, in the suicide bombing at the Friday prayers in Akhorwal. A few hours later, three more people died when grenades were flung at another mosque in Badhber.


In light of these horrifying attacks, it is ironic that the big counter-terrorism news of the week was the Obama administration’s announcement of stronger sanctions against the anti-India militant groups Lashkar-i-Taiba and Jaish-i-Mohammad.


As a goodwill gesture to India, the U.S. crackdown on terror financing is significant. After all, cut the funding and terrorist activities will inevitably decline. In the world of terror, money is needed not only to secure materials for attacks, but also to travel, pay militants, provide for their families, recruit and train new fighters, propagate the ideology and bribe government officials. As Pakistan’s security situation further deteriorates, Islamabad should make its own call to disrupt the funding mechanisms of all militant groups active within its borders, not only those that plot against India.


To be fair, Pakistan has made efforts in this regard, as towards anti-money laundering legislation declaring terror financing to be a criminal offence. And in September this year, the Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan directed stock exchanges and more than 600 financial companies to implement anti-terror financing measures outlined by the international Financial Action Task Force (FATF). Progress is already visible as the amount of remittances being channeled through banks rather than the informal system has more than quadrupled since 2001.


But the push to combat terror financing is coming from abroad, not Islamabad. Pakistan’s efforts have largely resulted from arm-twisting by the U.S. Treasury Department’s Office of Terrorism and Financial Intelligence, and best financial practice recommendations are coming from the FATF. Without domestic political will, funds will continue to flow into the coffers of terrorists who target innocent Pakistanis as brutally as foreign troops in Afghanistan.


Instead of waiting for directives from Washington, Islamabad should devise its own strategy to minimize illicit finance. For example, the government can work towards licensing and other informal financial networks. In conjunction with the telecom sector, the government should also promote mobile banking as that reduces the prevalence of cash transactions and, consequently, the opportunities for illegal funds transfers.


The government should also convene monitoring committees to oversee the finances of Islamic charities known to serve as fronts for terrorist organizations, particularly in the case of donations received from the Gulf region. Moreover, the State Bank can be empowered to revitalize its financial intelligence unit, and law-enforcers should be trained to conduct financial investigations.


A well-coordinated crackdown on terror financing will also curtail a variety of criminal activity, especially in Pakistan’s cities. Terror groups are known to draw on funds generated through drug trafficking, arms smuggling, bank robbery, kidnapping for ransom and even credit card fraud. By following the money trail, law-enforcers can identify and break up urban criminal rings that are affiliated with Fata-based militant groups.


(Source: Dawn)
 
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certainly the Funds are Blood of terrorist.If you curb it, they will die.
Stop funding to madresas which are recur ting suicide bombers.99.99% of these madresas belong to wahabi/salfi sects.Funds are also coming from same sects majority countries.
They are also using women in full hijab for funds transferring through banks,these women are transferring millions locally.
These women are doing job silently in public.Anyone could find them in posh areas moving in luxury automobile.
 
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well having a significantly large informal economy, its nearly impossible to monitor such financial flows. there is also very little you can do (in the short run) to limit robberies etc..
 
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Major funding is injecting to Propaganda Network. This Network is comprising of many segments of society.
1.Religious scholars and politicians
2.Politicians
3.Media
4.Govt. agencies
5.tableghees(missionaries)
 
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Major funding is injecting to Propaganda Network. This Network is comprising of many segments of society.
1.Religious scholars and politicians
2.Politicians
3.Media
4.Govt. agencies
5.tableghees(missionaries)


I didnot agree with you on the last one .. no one ever said me about this nor i heard anything about it ..
 
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I didnot agree with you on the last one .. no one ever said me about this nor i heard anything about it ..

These are the most silent but most effective worker of the Propaganda team. They are doing their job to convert the sunnis into their sect through their ideology of Biddah and spreading "jihad culture".
They are usually well off even spending most of time in Tableegh.They are frequent traveler mostly to Saudia Arabia.
 
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