Japan tells banks to report suspicious transfers by JVs with North Korea - sources

Japan tells banks to report suspicious transfers by JVs with North Korea - sources
By Reuters
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By Takahiko Wada

TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan's financial regulator has told the country's banks to report any suspicious money transfers involving 10 Japan-North Korea joint ventures, two people with direct knowledge of the matter said on Friday.

A government official and a manager at a major Japanese bank said the Financial Services Agency (FSA) on Monday told Japanese banks and credit associations to report such transfers by the joint ventures.

Reuters was unable to identify the firms suspected of making such transactions. The Mainichi newspaper said they included a manufacturer of pianos and acoustic devices as well as a food sales company.

The FSA declined to comment immediately.

The United Nations Security Council last year passed a resolution banning new joint ventures involving individuals or groups from North Korea, as well as investments in existing enterprises.

The FSA, concerned that Japan's lenders are lagging on efforts to stop money laundering and other illicit finance, has been urging banks to step up measures to detect suspicious transactions.

Japan faces a peer review in 2019 by the Paris-based Financial Action Task Force, a group created by the Group of Seven industrial powers to fight illicit finance.

A critical report from the task force might result in sanctions that would include shutting Japanese lenders out of the global banking network.

(Reporting by Takahiko Wada; Additional reporting and writing by Thomas Wilson; Editing by Richard Borsuk)

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