Swiss govt to track corporate ownership in bid to curb money laundering
ZURICH - The Swiss government plans to create a central
registry to track who actually owns legal entities in a move to fight
money-laundering via shell companies, it said on Wednesday.
The cabinet asked the finance ministry to draft specific
proposals by mid-2023 that could increase transparency by making it easier to
identify corporate owners.
The move aims "to strengthen the prevention and
prosecution of financial crime and thus the integrity and reputation of (Switzerland
as a) financial centre and business location", it said in a statement.
Switzerland, whose banks make it the world's biggest manager
of offshore wealth, has long sought to fight its old image as a place for
criminals to stash ill-gotten gains. It routinely exchanges bank account
information with over 100 countries.
But it has faced international pressure to shed more light
onto the shadowy world of corporate ownership, where many companies cloak the
identity of the real beneficiaries.
The goal was to create a central register for identifying
owners and updating information about actual beneficiaries.
"The register should be accessible to relevant
authorities, but not to the public. The aim is to find a solution that is as
effective and efficient as possible," it said in a statement.
It asked the finance ministry to also consider steps to
tighten anti-money-laundering rules, for example by widening their scope to
include the legal professions, it said.
Parliament has in the past rejected the idea of subjecting
lawyers and financial advisers to the same rules that banks face on reporting
suspicious transactions.
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