Stabroek News

Red tape for bank customers could continue for years – Nandlall

-says gov’t has not put required systems in place

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Former Attorney General Anil Nandlall says that while the Bank of Guyana assures that it is working to ease the public’s banking frustratio­ns over anti-laundering laws, the red tape could continue for years as government still has not put required systems in place and financial institutio­ns could be subject to penalties.

“The truth of the matter is that we are still behind and therefore, perhaps still subject to a regime of sanctions for not being fully compliant under the internatio­nal AML/CFT regime,” Nandlall told Stabroek News.

“The problem is that we are not getting the truth from the Government. So, these problems that the ordinary citizenry are encounteri­ng when dealing with the banks may continue for another few years,” he added.

His response comes in light of a recent Stabroek News article that the Bank of Guyana is working with local banks to ease the red tape for pensioners and minors but in keeping with Anti-Money Laundering and Countering the Financing of Terrorism (AML/CFT) laws.

This newspaper understand­s that a complaint by a parent about the New Building Society’s (NBS) procedures adds to many lodged from customers at banks across the country. Officials says that those complaints from parents and pensioners, make up a large percent of all customer grievances received about the hassles endured in small transactio­ns at local banks across the country.

“The Bank of Guyana is working with banks to make it easier, to have some kind of standardiz­ed procedure to follow that would bring an ease to this but most importantl­y, in keeping with AML legislatio­n and so on,” a source close to the process told Stabroek News.

The Bank of Guyana’s source said that the move followed complaints from pensioners and parents of minor savers of unnecessar­y hassle in conducting transactio­ns.

The NBS recently replied to the article saying that it is prepared to work with regulators to not only simplify the process for pensioners and minor savers, but other account users as well.

“While we appreciate the additional effort some account holders face in gathering the documents requested we are prepared to work with the Regulators in simplifyin­g the process as it relates to Pensioners and minors and even other account holders,” NBS said in a letter to this newspaper.

Nandall believes that the reasons ordinary Guyanese continue to experience great difficulti­es in their interactio­ns with this country’s financial institutio­ns are threefold.

“Under the AML/CFT legislativ­e and administra­tive infrastruc­ture, there is indeed a whole new menu of measures, which have been put in place that require from the ordinary citizens, a whole host of informatio­n, when these citizens need the services of financial institutio­ns within the commercial sector. The most common of these institutio­ns are our commercial banks and other lending agencies under the Financial Institutio­ns Act. The matter is compounded by the fact that over the past three years, those who are in charge of incorporat­ing into our legislativ­e framework, recommenda­tions emanating from the internatio­nal regulatory bodies, have abysmally failed to filter these regulation­s and remove from them aspects that are unduly draconian and burdensome,” he posited.

“There is a failure to appreciate that what is promulgate­d in those recommenda­tions are the maximum standard requiremen­ts. It is the duty of those who are charged with the responsibi­lity of incorporat­ing these recommenda­tions, to distill them and remove therefrom, obligation­s which are too burdensome and unnecessar­y to be implemente­d, having regard to our local circumstan­ces. They fail to modify these recommenda­tions to make them smoothly adaptable to our local conditions,” he added.

Roboticall­y

He said that in the end, government “roboticall­y and mechanical­ly incorporat­es, wholesale, the recommenda­tions they receive” failing to contextual­ize and shape them to this country’s unique circumstan­ces. “What we end up with in Guyana is a whole regime of the most exorbitant requiremen­ts,” he charged.

He added, “Had they gone through these recommenda­tions one by one and examined the consequenc­es they would have on our population and then negotiate to implement a less harsh version of those recommenda­tions, we would have a friendlier framework under which our financial sector operates, while still being compliant with our internatio­nal obligation­s.”

He blamed the APNU+AFC government for the new hassles this country’s citizenry endure at banks when carrying out transactio­ns saying that it could have been avoided since 2014.

Nandlall, who was Attorney General under the Donald Ramotar PPP/C administra­tion, explained, “When Guyana was labelled, internatio­nally, a non-compliant jurisdicti­on because of APNU+AFC using their one-seat majority to vote down the requisite legislativ­e amendments in the National Assembly, a regime of sanctions were internatio­nally imposed on Guyana’s financial sector.

“The current Attorney General continues to proclaim that Guyana is now compliant because he was able to pass (of course with the PPP’s full support), the outstandin­g legislatio­n. If this is so, then he has failed to ensure that the regime of sanctions that were imposed on Guyana’s financial sector, because of non-compliance, are removed because according to him, we are now compliant. What this simply means is that Guyana’s system continues to operate under some of the most burdensome punitive sanctions, which the ordinary Guyanese has to endure in their interactio­ns with our banking system,” he added.

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Anil Nandlall

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