National Risk Assessment report produced by the Treasury and
the Home Office reveals many of the structures that make carrying out financial
activity in the UK appealing for law-abiding businesses also leave British
banks vulnerable to corruption. Intelligence gaps make it very difficult to
tell how much corrupt money was actually flowing through the UK, particularly
in terms of what was termed “high-end” corruption.
Also raised in the investigation are the activities of
“known professional enablers” within the UK legal sector who facilitate money
laundering “through the purchase of property with criminal proceeds, and the
creation of complex corporate structures and offshore vehicles to conceal the
ownership and facilitate the movement of criminal assets.”
While precise figures for corrupt money laundered through
the UK are unclear, the report did look at some of the estimates given.
“Some non-governmental organizations estimate that between
£23 billion and £57 billion [$35.5 billion and $88 billion] is laundered within
and through the UK each year,” the report states. “The National Crime Agency
assesses that hundreds of billions of dollars are laundered through UK banks
and their subsidiaries each year.”
Nick Maxwell, the head of advocacy and research at
Transparency International, said the report “puts beyond any doubt that vast
sums of money from the proceeds of corruption around the world are flowing into
the UK, and our system for stopping it and preventing it isn’t fit for purpose.
All countries are generally doing very badly at stopping the proceeds of
corruption from being laundered, so it’s very positive that there’s such
transparency over the law enforcement intelligence gaps,” he added.
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