A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, April 30, 2016
Vatican Watchdog Says Suspicious Transactions Almost Quadrupled
Officials say figures reflect greater vigilance rather than any rise in illicit financial activities

ROME—The Vatican’s financial watchdog registered 544 suspicious
transactions in 2015—almost four times as many as the previous year—but
officials said Thursday it reflected greater vigilance rather than any
rise in illicit financial activities.
The Financial Information Authority, or AIF, said it turned over 17 of
those cases, mostly involving potential money laundering, to Vatican
prosecutors.
“I would like to see the figure zero,” René Brülhart, the AIF’s
president told reporters. “But it doesn’t reflect reality. Wherever you
have financial transactions, financial activity, you always see
something potentially suspicious.”
Mr. Brülhart said the Vatican’s oversight system uses a “rather low
reporting threshold,” in part to raise awareness of potential problems.
He said it was a “fair assessment” that none of the suspicious activity
was related to the financing of terrorism.
Thursday’s annual report was the fourth published by the AIF, which Pope
Benedict XVI set up in 2010 to work toward compliance with
international standards on financial crimes. That step began a series of
financial reforms at the Vatican, which have been continued by Pope
Francis.
Mr. Brülhart touted a December 2015 report by the Council of Europe’s
Moneyvaal committee, which praised the “intensive review process” at the
scandal-plagued Vatican bank. The bank has closed more than 4,800
accounts, in some cases because a client’s profile didn’t conform with
the bank’s stated mission to serve “works of religion.”
But Moneyvaal also put the Vatican on notice to prosecute those
suspected of financial crimes, since nobody has yet been prosecuted
under a 2013 Vatican anti-money-laundering law. Since 2011, the AIF has
referred 34 cases of suspicious activity to Vatican prosecutors.
AIF’s director, Tommaso Di Ruzza, told reporters Thursday that Vatican
prosecutors were “working very seriously” on the cases. A Vatican
statement last December noted that prosecution of suspected crimes is
especially complicated in the case of the Holy See, since such cases
often involve persons living outside the tiny city-state.
Mr. Brülhart also emphasized the Vatican’s commitment to international
cooperation. The AIF reported 380 cases of bilateral cooperation with
foreign authorities in 2015, up from 113 the previous year.
The regulator also tracks declarations of outgoing cash that exceed
€10,000 ($11,335), of which it counted 1,196 in 2015, a rise of 85 over
the previous year.
Write to Francis X. Rocca at francis.rocca@wsj.com