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3 Global risks of Hawala activity

يسري تنفيذه من تاريخ 15/8/2021

Hawaladars' business model is built around satisfying customers' needs to move money rapidly across borders, a service that may also be misused by criminals as is to individuals seeking to conduct legitimate personal remittances. In recent years hawala providers have been repeatedly abused to transfer illicit funds, including funds involved in terrorist financing. Certain providers have been found to be fully complicit in these schemes, and even to operate as professional money launderers. In addition, hawala providers generally have the greatest competitive advantage in areas where more formal MVTS providers do not operate or have limited infrastructure, often because these jurisdictions are remote or classified as very high risk. Although this certainly does not mean that every transaction to those areas is illicit, it does suggest that the institutional risk profile of the average hawala provider is likely to be higher than that of other MVTS providers. In many jurisdictions, hawala providers operate underground, because they are providing an illegal service or because they and their customers don't want to be required to comply with rules related to taxes, currency controls, and AML/CFT compliance. This is especially common among hawala providers operating in jurisdictions where hawala is prohibited, unregulated, or illegal.

The inherent risk of hawala providers is influenced primarily by the regulatory environment and illicit finance risks in the jurisdictions in which they do business, the products and services they provide, and their customer base:

 1.Regulatory Environment
 

The regulatory environment for hawala providers clearly varies across jurisdictions. In some jurisdictions, they are not able to maintain a license or registration and therefore operate entirely underground. While operating underground is generally prohibited under the laws of the country where the hawala provider operates, it does not necessarily mean that a provider is a money launderer. Still, underground providers will seek to conceal their activities from financial institutions, and are extremely unlikely to comply with any AML/CFT obligations. Such entities may present themselves to LFIs as ``general trading companies'' or describe other business types that can justify regular international transfers, including dealing in precious metals or stones, trading in used cars, or in high value carpets.

Even in jurisdictions where hawala is legal and regulated such as the UAE, hawala providers may have only a basic understanding of their financial crime risks and obligations, and may not use systems and technologies that support compliance with those obligations. Furthermore, because hawaladars may lack strong AML/CFT preventive measures, they may be sought out by customers specifically hoping to take advantage of this possible weakness. As a result, hawala providers are almost always found to be classified as very high-risk customers by banks. A hawala provider can strive to manage this risk by applying strong, targeted controls and maintaining an effective AML/CFT program that meets or exceeds UAE requirements and global standards (see Part II section 3 below).

 2.Geography
 

Hawala providers, like all financial institutions, are heavily exposed to the risks prevalent in the geographies where they operate. The risk of a hawala provider, therefore, will depend in part on the illicit finance risks--including ML/TF and sanctions evasion--in the jurisdictions where it is established or has subsidiaries. In addition, a provider's risk will also be impacted by the jurisdictions with which it most frequently does business. For example, the risk of a hawaladar operating in the UAE and primarily executing transfers to and from Country X should be assessed based on the illicit finance risk in both the UAE and Country X.

 3.Products, Services, and Delivery Channels
 

Hawala providers, by definition, all provide money or value transfer services using hawala networks, which is subject to higher risks. The risk of hawala transactions may be increased or decreased by the size and purpose of the transaction. Some hawaladars only carry out low-value personal remittances, while others service businesses by supporting commercial operations, which may involve relatively high-value transactions. Low-value personal remittances may be considered lower-risk, although low-value remittances to jurisdictions at high-risk for terrorist financing should be treated as equally high risk. RHP in the UAE may perform only limited services (listed in section 4.1 below), but hawala providers established elsewhere may not have such restrictions on their activity.

The risk involved in providing the hawala service is further impacted by the delivery channels through which it is offered. Channels that promote anonymity (accepting transaction orders by text or telephone; accepting cash; allowing agents or third parties to order transactions on behalf of the originator) increase the risk of the service. Some international law enforcement agencies have reported cases of hawala providers operating in virtual currencies; although still rare, such a delivery channel would be extremely high risk, as it would combine the general risks of hawala providers with those of virtual currencies, which offer illicit actors anonymity and access to a practically unregulated financial sector.

In addition, hawala services may not be the only financial product hawala providers offer. In many jurisdictions providers also offer small loans (often with pawned items as security) and sell stored value cards, or provide safekeeping services for cash. They may also engage in non-financial lines of business such as selling calling cards, mobile phones and SIM cards. All of these lines of business are cash intensive4 and high-risk, and are generally not subject to AML/CFT controls. Even in a jurisdiction where hawala providers are regulated, they may commingle cash proceeds of these other services with hawala funds. This means that a hawala provider with an account at an LFI could use that account to support all aspects of its business, not simply provision of hawala services.

 4.Customer Base
 

Most hawala providers are likely to serve a customer base made up of lower-income individuals seeking to conduct or receive fairly low-value transfers. Such a customer base is not necessarily low-risk, especially when customers have ties to jurisdictions that are at high risk for terrorist financing. The risk of the provider's customer base, however, will be further increased if the provider conducts larger transfers on behalf of business entities (e.g. trade-based transactions), if it has a high proportion of legal person customers, or if its customers include politically exposed persons.


The CBUAE will issue Guidance for LFIs providing services to Cash Intensive Businesses.