Anti-Money Laundering and
Countering the Financing of Terrorism
The Financial Action Task Force (FATF)
Established in 1989, the Financial
Action Task Force (FATF) is a strategic inter-governmental body whose head
office is located in Paris. Its broad purpose is to develop international AML/CFT
standards. New Zealand, together with other nations, including Australia, Canada,
the United Kingdom and the United States, are members of the FATF. The International
Monetary Fund and the World Bank, in addition to many other non-governmental bodies,
work co-operatively with the FATF.
The FATF has issued Forty
Recommendations on money laundering and Nine Special
Recommendations on Terrorist Financing as well as a number of Interpretative
Notes and Best
Practice Guidelines. The standards contained in those instruments are designed
to assist individual States and other jurisdictions to identify and combat money
laundering and terrorist financing methods through domestic implementation of those
standards.
New Zealand has been a member of the FATF since its creation and actively
supports and participates in its work. |