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2.3.1.1 Cross-Border Movement of Cash and Cash Couriers

يسري تنفيذه من تاريخ 27/9/2021

Cash-intensive businesses may move cash across borders as part of their business model. Cross-border movement of licit cash can be legal, subject to compliance with reporting and other relevant legal and regulatory requirements. However, criminals may also seek to move cash across borders; according to FATF, the physical transportation of cash across an international border is “one of the oldest and most basic forms of money laundering” and is still widely used today.4 The criminal economy tends to be cash-based with illicit proceeds of crime moving quickly and anonymously, including across borders. Illicit actors often choose to remove their illicit assets from a bank account in order to obscure the audit trail by transporting it to another country where they can spend the cash on goods or services or reintroduce the cash into the financial system. Illicit actors who generate cash proceeds also seek to move their profits to jurisdictions that will allow the placement of cash into the legal economy without detection. Their selection of a jurisdiction can be driven by the predominant use of cash in that jurisdiction, the weaker AML/CFT controls of a jurisdiction’s financial system including few or no restrictions on cash payments, or a jurisdiction’s reputation as a banking secrecy haven. Illicit actors can exploit the high volume of passenger, cargo, and mail movements into and out of jurisdictions to move cash without attracting the attention of authorities.

Cash-intensive businesses may utilize cash couriers to move cash across borders. Cash couriers are natural persons who physically transport currency and bearer negotiable instruments on their person or accompanying luggage from one jurisdiction to another. Couriers may be directly involved in the underlying crime or may be third parties recruited specifically to move money to another jurisdiction. Mechanisms to conceal the cash include within pieces of clothing on the physical persons (such as a money belt), hidden within luggage, or even concealed internally. Cash couriers may use air, sea, or rail transport to cross an international border and typically use high denomination banknotes as part of their transportation, which decreases the size and bulk of low denomination banknotes.

Specifically, cross-border movements of cash across an international border are used to:

 Launder proceeds of crime by placing them in another jurisdiction, typically with weaker AML/CFT controls.
 Move illicit value to purchase assets that can hold considerable value, such as luxury goods, or transfer the value of the funds for them to be stored.
 Hide proceeds from authorities and complicate asset recovery.
 

It is not illegal to move cash into or out of the UAE. However, natural or legal persons must declare upon entering or leaving the UAE any currencies, bearer negotiable instruments, precious metals and stones above the threshold of AED 60,000. The relevant extract of the Regulation on the Declaration of Currencies, Bearer Negotiable Instruments, and Precious Metals and Stones in Possession of Travelers Entering or Leaving the UAE (issued in the Official Gazette No 703 dated 31/05/2021) is in the box below.

Article (8) of Federal Decree-Law No. (20) of 2018 on Anti Money Laundering and Combating the Financing of Terrorism and the financing of Illegal Organizations stipulates that (when entering or leaving the country, any person must declare the currencies or bearer negotiable financial instruments, precious metals or stones of value, in accordance with the declaration regulation issued by the Central Bank).

Accordingly, the Board of Directors of the Central Bank has decided that the maximum threshold for currencies, bearer negotiable instruments, and precious metals and stones, shall be in accordance with the table below, and shall apply to all forms of physical cross-border transportation, whether by travelers or through mail and cargo. Bearer negotiable instruments mean financial instruments of whatever form, whether in the form of a bearer document, such as travelers checks, promissory checks, payment orders, or others. Based on the above, any natural or legal person shall declare upon entering or leaving the UAE any currencies, bearer negotiable instruments, precious metals and stones above the threshold specified in the table and shall provide an honest and clear answer and adequate information to the Customs authority and its staff upon request. Declarations shall also be made for currencies, bearer negotiable instruments, precious metals or stones of a value exceeding the specified threshold crossing the border through cargo, mail or shipments transported using transport service companies using the official customs systems of the UAE.

 

Maximum threshold for currencies, bearer negotiable instruments, and precious metals and stones
 
Currencies/Instruments/Metals/ Precious stonesThreshold above which declaration is required
1. Currencies (UAE Dhrs or equivalent in other currencies)UAE Dhrs 60,000
or equivalent in any other
currencies
2. Any type of bearer negotiable instrumentsUAE Dhrs 60,000
or equivalent in any other
currencies
3. Precious metals with high economic value in any form, type or classification, provided they are not intended for commercial purposes or transported by a traveler that engages in the same trade or a traveler that transports such materials as a profession and frequently visits the department or the customs port.UAE Dhrs 60,000
or equivalent in any other currencies
4. Precious stones with high economic value in any form, type or classification, provided they are not intended for commercial purposes or transported by a traveler that engages in the same trade or a traveler that transports such materials as a profession and frequently visits the department or the customs port.UAE Dhrs 60,000
or equivalent in any other
currencies

 

Understanding whether customers have made any such declarations, in accordance with the Regulation should form part of any due diligence by the LFIs where required. As part of due diligence, LFIs may require additional information on the customer or the transaction, including the source of funds and relevant documentation.

Potential Risk Indicators:

  oTransactions involving locations or customers originating from locations with poor AML/CFT regimes or high exposure to corruption.
  oSignificant and/or frequent cash deposits or currency exchanges made over a short period of time.
  oCustomer is in possession of money supposedly for business reasons while travelling to countries where cash payments are restricted.
  oCustomer requests to purchase, or has possession of, large volumes of high denomination banknotes.
  oCustomer requests to purchase, or has possession of, large amounts of foreign currency without a plausible explanation.
  oCustomers who use false identification or offer different identifications on separate occasions
 

4 FATF “Money Laundering through the Physical Transportation of Cash” (October 2015), available at: https://www.fatf- gafi.org/media/fatf/documents/reports/money-laundering-through-transportation-cash.pdf