Pakistan to “devise strategy” to stay off terror financing list

Pakistan will develop a strategy to avoid being put on a global terror financing watchlist, the finance minister said today, after China and Saudi Arabia deserted Islamabad over the issue at a recent meeting in Paris.

Members of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), an anti money-laundering watchdog based in the French capital, voted last week to place Pakistan on its grey list of nations which are not doing enough to combat terror financing in June, a diplomatic source told AFP.

   

That gives Pakistan three months to make enough changes to avoid being listed, which could hamper some foreign investment and further strain relations with Washington, where officials have put increasing pressure on Pakistan over its alleged support for militant safe havens.

“We will start meeting on the issue of FATF after March 1 to see what can we do on this and what strategy we can devise,” finance minister Rana Afzal Khan told AFP, adding that Pakistan has not yet received a list of actions it needs to implement.

The move, which was not announced in FATF’s statement at the close of the six-day meeting, came after members had initially been unable to reach a consensus, with Turkey, China and Saudi Arabia holding out, the diplomatic source said.

That saw Pakistani foreign minister Khawaja Asif confidently tweet last week that Pakistan had avoided being grey-listed.

But amid a flurry of diplomatic activity a second vote was held, with the US convincing Riyadh to change its vote and Beijing staying silent, the source said.

The decision is a diplomatic blow to Islamabad’s relationship with its “all-weather” friend China, which has invested billions in the country’s infrastructure, and Saudi Arabia, to which Pakistan sent some 1,000 troops earlier this month.

“It shows that the people who are concerned about terror financing are pretty broad,” the diplomatic source told AFP.

Pakistan was previously on the list from 2012 until 2015.

FATF is an inter-governmental body established in 1989 to help combat money-laundering and financing for extremists. 

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