NA passes bill to regulate forex movement

Okays another one to enhance punishment of money launderers


​ Our Correspondent September 30, 2019
Policymakers. PHOTO: EXPRESS/ FILE

ISLAMABAD: The National Assembly on Monday passed two bills – one to amend the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act (FERA), 1947 to further regulate foreign exchange movement and the other to enhance punishment of money launderers.

Minister of State for Parliamentary Affairs Ali Muhammad Khan moved the Foreign Exchange Regulation (Amendment) Bill, 2019 to amend the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act, 1947 and the bill was passed by the assembly through voice vote.

The foreign exchange policy and operations in Pakistan were governed under the provisions of FERA, 1947 which empowered the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) to regulate flows of foreign exchange into and out of the country.

However, the SBP did not have explicit powers under FERA, 1947 to issue any regulation and instruction to the inland movement of foreign currencies.

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The bill enhanced the punishments provided in Section 23 of FERA, 1947 to create firmer deterrence against contravention of various provisions of the act. This bill, therefore seeks to amend FERA, 1947 in order to enable the SBP to regulate the foreign exchange regime in Pakistan more comprehensively as well as to strengthen the effectiveness of the act.

The minister also moved the bill to further amend the Anti-Money Laundering Act, 2010 as reported by the standing committee and the house also passed it.

According to statement of objects and reasons, the bill on anti-money laundering was passed to bring further improvements in the Anti-Money Laundering Act, 2010 in line with suggestions of AML/CFT stakeholders particularly law enforcement agencies responsible for the enforcement of the act.

The amendments were aimed at streamlining the existing anti-money laundering law in line with the international standards enhancing the punishment of offense of money laundering to make it deterrent and dissuasive.

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The amendments would make money laundering a cognisable offense.

The amendment would also allow Financial Monitoring Unit to seek Egmont Group Membership (Group of Financial Intelligence Unit) which is a requirement under the Financial Action Task Force recommendations.

Meanwhile, the chairmen of different standing committees presented the periodical reports of their committees on federal education and professional training, planning, development and reform, foreign affairs and states and frontier regions, parliamentary affairs, science and technology, cabinet secretariat, rules of procedure and privileges, narcotics control and law and justice for the period from January to June 2019.

Fateha

The National Assembly offered Fateha for the people who died in the earthquake in Mirpur and security personnel who embraced martyrdom in the Quetta blast.

The house also offered Fateha for security personnel and others who died in the road accident in Chilas and for JUI-F leader Maulana Muhammad Hanif who was martyred in the Chaman blast and for former federal minister Rana Muhamamd Afzal. Fateha was led by Maulana Abdul Akbar Chitrali.

(With Additional Input from APP)

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