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NEW YORK: The United States authorities have imposed fines worth $55 million on the National Bank of Pakistan (NBP) for anti-money laundering violations and for repeated compliance failures, it emerged on Thursday.
According to media reports, the fines have been imposed by the US Federal Reserve, the central bank of the country, and Superintendent of Financial Services Adrienne A Harris of the state of New York.
The Federal Reserve Board announced a $20.4m penalty against the bank for anti-money laundering violations. According to a press release issued by the Fed, it would also require the bank to improve its anti-money laundering programme.
#New: #NYDFS Superintendent of Financial Services Adrienne A. Harris announced today that the National Bank of Pakistan and its NY branch have agreed to pay $35M. Read More: https://t.co/jPe8saRL0y.
— NYDFS (@NYDFS) February 24, 2022
The Fed went on to say that NBP’s US banking operations “did not maintain an effective risk management programme or controls sufficient to comply with anti-money laundering laws”.
It added that the action was in conjunction with an action by the New York State Department of Financial Services (NYDFS), which imposed a penalty of $35m for “repeated compliance failures”.
NYDFS Superintendent Adrienne A. Harris announced that NBP and its New York branch had agreed to pay the penalty. “The NBP allowed serious compliance deficiencies in its NY branch to persist for years despite repeated regulatory warnings,” a press released quoted Harris as saying.
It added that after investigations by the NYDFS and the Federal Reserve Bank of NY in 2014 and 2015, the NY branch was found to have “inadequate Bank Secrecy Act/Anti-Money Laundering (BSA/AML) compliance programmes, serious issues with its transaction monitoring system, and significant shortcomings in managerial oversight”.
Enforcement action was taken against the bank in 2016 in the form of a written agreement in which the NBP acknowledged the oversight and compliance deficiencies and agreed to remediate them, the statement said. However, the branch’s condition and its risk management and compliance programmes continued to deteriorate.
“These continued failures revealed that the branch’s senior management were unwilling or unable to promote a culture of compliance, adequate resources were not provided for compliance programmes, and the bank failed to adequately supervise the branch by allowing problems to worsen year after year. The conditions at the branch demonstrated severe weaknesses, and unsafe, unsound conditions requiring urgent restructuring,” the press release said.
It added that under the settlement reached, the NBP would be required to create a written plan detailing enhancements to the policies and procedures of the bank’s BSA/AML compliance programme, its Suspicious Activity Monitoring and Reporting programme and its customer due diligence requirements. At the same time, the NYDFS also acknowledged the bank’s cooperation with the investigation and ongoing remedial efforts.