The People's Bank of China (PBOC), the central bank, said on Wednesday it
would draw up regulations to strictly enforce the country's anti-money
laundering law "as soon as possible".
The bank would soon issue a series
of regulations to combat money laundering in securities, futures and insurance
sectors, said Chen Xiaoyun, an official with the PBOC.
The law would
help China's accession to the world's money policing agency, the Financial
Action Task Force on Money Laundering (FATF), said Liu Lianke, an official with
the PBOC's anti-money laundering bureau, adding that China is likely to join the
inter-governmental organization in June 2007.
The law, approved on
Tuesday by the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress (NPC), the
country's top legislature, will come into effect on January 1 next year.
The PBOC launched its anti-money laundering campaign in 2003, and
established an anti-money laundering bureau and a monitoring and analysis
center.
By the end of 2005, all the country's commercial banks, 90
percent of the urban credit cooperatives and foreign banks, and 50 percent of
the rural credit unions had access to the monitoring and analysis network.
According to the China Anti-Money Laundering Monitoring and Analysis
Center, 683 suspicious cases had been reported to the police by the end of 2005,
involving 137.8 billion yuan (17.2 billion U.S. dollars) and more than one
billion U.S. dollars.
The FATF was established at the G-7 Summit in
Paris in 1989, in response to mounting concern over money laundering. It has 33
members and China became an observer in 2005.
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