UAE banks to freeze ‘suspect accounts’

UAE banks to freeze ‘suspect accounts’
Updated 20 November 2014
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UAE banks to freeze ‘suspect accounts’

UAE banks to freeze ‘suspect accounts’

DUBAI: UAE banks have been banned from doing business with some extremist groups including the Muslim Brotherhood, their representative said, as the country’s central bank won powers to freeze suspect accounts for up to seven days.
The government said it was stepping up efforts to cut off financing to groups it classifies as terrorist.
The move was announced in a decree published on the prime minister’s website.
Asked about the new rules, the head of the UAE Banks Federation said lenders had been told not to do business with the UAE branch of the Egypt-based Brotherhood and with Al-Islah, a local extremist group banned in the UAE for alleged links to the Brotherhood.
“This is enforcing anti-money laundering. Banks have to look to this legislation and comply. They’re considered terrorist groups,” Abdul Aziz Al-Ghurair said on the sidelines of a banking conference in Dubai.
On Saturday, the UAE designated 85 organizations as terrorist groups including the Brotherhood, Islamic State — which has taken over swathes of Syria and Iraq — and other militant groups such as Yemen’s Houthi movement.
The Brotherhood has been a source of friction between Gulf Arab states, with the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Bahrain having recalled their ambassadors from Doha over Qatar’s support for the group.
That eight-month diplomatic standoff was ended on Sunday.
Authorities in Cairo designated the Brotherhood a terrorist group last December, several months after the army removed one of the organization’s leading members, Mohamed Mursi, from the presidency.
The UAE has sought to reinforce anti-money laundering regulations in recent years. Stiffer fines and jail terms for offenders form part of an amendment to a 2002 law awaiting approval by the country’s ruler, while banks have ramped up staffing.
Authorities have cracked down on Al-Islah and jailed scores of Islamists convicted in January of forming an illegal branch of the Brotherhood.