Follow the money: Explore money laundering and human trafficking links Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Local Financial Service Providers (FSP) are being urged to train their staff to identify the signs of human trafficking due to its link with money laundering.

Vice president of the International Compliance Association, Pekka Dare in making his presentation on Human Trafficking and Money Laundering at the recently held Anti-Money Laundering/Counter Financing of Terrorism Conference hosted last month by the Jamaica Institute of Financial Services (JIFS) and the Jamaica Bankers Association (JBA), said FSPs have a “massive role to play” in combating human trafficking.

The umbilical ties between the two have resulted in billions of illicit funds flowing through the Caribbean, Dare said pointing to data from the United Nations and US-based Global Financial Integrity – which researches corruption and illicit financial flows.

“The scale of this problem is global and it is huge,” he said.

According to Dare, research also indicates that human traffickers exploit the fisheries industry within the Caribbean.

“It [the research] talked about US$10 billion turnover across the Caribbean with between 80,000 to 100,000 persons being smuggled through the Caribbean annually,” he told the gathering of financial service providers.

With the growth of human trafficking globally, he urged the FSPs to “follow the money” and improve their systems for tracking illicit transactions.

“There is a lot of focus on following the money…this activity wouldn’t continue without the organised criminal networks making huge amounts of money…if we can work together as financial institutions, Financial Intelligence Units (FIU) and regulators to try and strangle and check where the money is going, we can stop these networks,” he said.

He encouraged FSPs to utilise the resources of firms such as the United Kingdom-based charity Stop the Traffic to bolster their watch of suspicious financial transactions.

A financial inclusive economy will also go a long way toward stemming human trafficking, he said.

“We need to keep promoting financial inclusion because the grey economy thrives [with funding from human trafficking]. This is where a lot of this money moves in alternative remittance systems such as Hawala [an alternative remittance channel that exists outside of traditional banking systems],” he said.

“Often migrants are not banked and they will use the informal economy to move money…if we can encourage these people to use the regulated or traditional economy and financial services, we have more chances of protecting them and detecting this activity,” he said.

He suggested that FPS look for suspicious transactions such as “money coming in and out quickly; frequent transfers to several parties abroad and strange flows of money in short time periods.”

Spreading financial transactions across multiple banks; buying high-value goods and real estate; transfers of cross-border funds and an unwillingness to declare ‘source of funds’ are also tell-tale signs of human trafficking, Dare said.

“Train and educate your staff on the red flags of human trafficking that they need to look for…there is a massive link to Know Your Customer (KYC) and Customer Due Diligence (CDD),” he said.

For Business and Financial Consultant of Modern Slavery and Human Trafficking of Stop the Traffic, Christina Smith, modern slavery and human trafficking is the third most profitable criminal activity in the world behind counterfeit goods and drug trafficking.

“It is always the one that gets forgotten but it is huge in terms of profit and this is why following that money is so crucial,” she told the conference.

For example, “One of our partners in Houston found that traffickers were exploiting women in Houston and in 2019 alone, they made US$ 3 billion in one year just for trafficking women.”

By Tameka Gordon

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Cheers to your wealth, this calls for champagne! Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Proven teams up with CPJ to surprise clients for World Champagne Day

Loop News

1 hrs ago – Updated

L-R: Andy Heaven, Brand Manager, Ready to Drink Beverages-Caribbean Producers Jamaica, Grace Walker- Financial Controller -Jamaica Tours and Jermaine Harvey Senior Portfolio Advisor ( Montego Bay)- PROVEN Wealth Limited.

NEWYou can now listen to Loop News articles!

Global Champagne Day is celebrated every year on the fourth Friday in October. Champagne is the most prestigious sparkling wine in the world, made only from grapes grown on the chalky soils in Champagne, the most northernly of France’s wine regions, about an hour’s drive east of Paris. Only three grape varieties are permitted, Chardonnay, Pinot Noir and Pinot Meunier. To produce Champagne’s unique bubbles, the wine undergoes a secondary fermentation process in the bottle. Each part of the procedure is labour intensive all of which adds to the cost of making sparkling wine in this way. Only sparkling wine made in the region of Champagne and using this technique can be called Champagne. Traditionally, the beverage is served in a champagne flute, whose characteristics include a long stem with a tall, narrow bowl, thin sides, and an etched bottom.

This year, PROVEN Wealth Limited and Caribbean Producers Jamaica honoured PROVEN’s clients throughout the island by delivering customised champagne packages to say thank you for their support and to celebrate the great things to come. The packages featured bottles of Laurent – Perrier Champagne, and to keep the celebrations going, CPJ will provide a special discount for these selected clients to redeemed within a year.

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Snr Supt: No arrests at ‘perfect’ Tobago carnival

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Cops in riot gear keep a close eye on proceedings during J’Ouvert celebrations in Crown Point last Saturday. – David Reid

Tobago Snr Supt Junior Benjamin has said no arrests were made during the island’s inaugural carnival celebrations.

The festivities were held from October 28-30, with thousands of visitors from Trinidad and other parts of the world flocking to the island.

In an interview with Newsday on Tuesday, Benjamin said: “Everything went according to plan – no one was locked up, for anything at all. There was police presence all over, it was as perfect as can be.”

He noted that approximately 145 officers were sent from Trinidad to assist, as he gave his commendations.

“As the police, we did our part. I think we did pretty well given those situations. I am very pleased with my officers and the work that they did over the carnival period – extremely proud of them.”

Questioned about the traffic congestion observed during the J’Ouvert celebrations, much to the disapproval of revellers, Benjamin said the Crown Point venue needs to be reconsidered. At approximately 9:30am, police ended the revelry by stopping the music, but exiting the area proved to be a nightmare for eastbound drivers, who remained in gridlock traffic for several hours.

“That is not the place to put it. There is absolutely nothing we could have done for that – they need to move it from Canaan/ Crown Point. It is too big for Canaan/ Crown Point.”

He said the parade of the bands also stalled. “It wasn’t moving anywhere. Even when the first band came down the road and they meet to the end, they were supposed to go to the (Store Bay) Heritage Park – they went nowhere.”

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PSC wants your feedback on the police service

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Members of the Police Service take part in the Independence Day parade at the Queen’s Park Savannah on Wednesday. – Photo by Sureash Cholai

THE public is being asked to participate in a survey on trust, confidence and satisfaction in the police service.

The Police Service Commission (PSC), in a media release on Monday, said the survey runs from November 1 to 22.

It will collect information on a range of critical issues related to public perception of the police service and consists of 13 questions.

“The survey seeks to identify the areas in the police service that are working well, and those that require improvement in ensuring the safety and security of the people of TT. The findings of the survey will give the commission an insight into what is necessary to improve the services provided to the public by the TT Police Service.”

The survey is available on the Service Commissions Department’s website at https://scd.org.tt.

Members of the public are not required to identify themselves, and can also complete the survey through quick response (QR) codes which enable fast and easy access by anyone with a smartphone.

“All responses, opinions collected, information arising from the surveys, identifiers and any information about respondents learned incidentally will be kept completely confidential and not be discussed, disclosed, or disseminated.”

You can access the survey at https://forms.office.com/pages/responsepage.aspx?id=CUrFFNsOR0K265osloFJ95WHIdg6UWNLld1SXZkv2-dUNjhHQVBVWk5WMEUyREhGMDJFSFVCSDdXTi4u

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69 Caribbean Nationals Repatriated After Illegal Sea Voyages – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

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The United States Coast Guard has reported repatriating 69 Dominican Republic nationals between Saturday and Monday following multiple illegal voyage vessel interdictions in the Mona Passage.

According to a Coast Guard release, the interdictions resulted from ongoing local and federal multi-agency efforts supporting the Caribbean Border Interagency Group (CBIG).

“The Coast Guard’s main priority is to safeguard lives at sea,” said Captain Jose E. Díaz, Sector San Juan commander.

“These voyages are extremely dangerous and we urge anyone thinking of taking part in one that they do not take to the sea,” he declared.

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In addition, the Coast Guard official warned anyone  that anyone who is interdicted must realise they could also face possible prosecution and be sent back to their country of origin or departure.

From October 1, 2021, through September 30, 2022, the Coast Guard carried out 88 illegal voyage interdictions in the Mona Passage and waters near Puerto Rico.

Interdicted during the period were 2,273 non-U.S. citizens.

They included 1,705 Dominicans, 444 Haitians, four Cubans, two Ecuadorians, 67 Venezuelans, 12 Uzbeks, two Iranians, one Colombian, one Spaniard, and 35 of unknown nationalities.

Headline photo courtesy United States Coast Guard.

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