Mugs of Hizbullah leader Hassan Nasrallah on sale in Beirut
(Credit: Paul Cochrane)
(Credit: Paul Cochrane)
Hizbullah
has long been on the terrorism radar and despite current focus on
Islamic State, the United States is attempting to maintain pressure
on the group's finances through specific legislation. Paul Cochrane,
in Beirut, explores the likely impact.
At a
time when the world is regularly sickened by webcast beheadings and
civilian bombings carried out by Islamic State (IS), it is perhaps
hard to recall that Shia militant group Hizbullah was previously
viewed as the world's most notorious terror organisation. Today, with
12 members of Lebanon's parliament (and two ministers in cabinet), a
panopoly of social services, a TV station and even a museum,
Hizbullah is an integral part of the country's political and social
scene. However, it still operates a private army, which is fighting
in Syria's civil war, and is regarded by the USA with undiminished
hostility. It was also labelled a terrorist organisation
by the Arab League as recently as 11 March this year, although
critics have claimed this reflected tension between Sunni country
governments and Shia forces in the region. The designation, supported
by the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), could bring any transactions
deemed to be with Hizbullah within the scope of anti-terror finance
laws in Arab countries.
US
antagonism legislated
In
AML terms, it was the passage, in
November, by the
US
Congress of
the Hezbollah
International Financing Prevention Act
of 2015 that
probably caused the most concern in Lebanon.
Enactment was followed
by a Drug
Enforcement Administration (DEA)
announcement,
in February 2016,
that it had evidence of a “massive Hizbullah drug and money
laundering scheme” operated at a global level by Hizbullah's
External Security Organisation's Business Affairs Component (BAC).
The statement followed US Treasury accusations (in June 2015) against
three Lebanese Shia businessmen and investors, citing direct links
with Hizbullah. One casualty was Kassem Hejeij, the head of Middle
East Africa (MEA) Bank; he resigned in favour of his son after being
placed on a US sanctions list.
Local
reaction
The
new Act and these moves have
caused widespread concern in
the Lebanese financial sector, anxious
lest it fall foul of US
regulators in the wake of
the Lebanese Canadian Bank (LCB) in 2011, which
saw that institution identified
as a launderer for Hizbullah. In response, two delegations,
comprising Lebanese
politicians and financial institutions, went to Washington,
separately, earlier
this year to ensure that the whole country was not caught in the US'
dragnet, this despite
Iranian-backed Hizbullah saying that they have no presence in the
country's financial system.
“We had good discussions with Treasury and the State Department. We were not going to argue why (they) did it, it was about making sure there's no collateral damage because of the law,” said Yassine Jaber, a member of the Lebanese Parliament for the Shia-based Amal Movement. “We made the case that Lebanon is compliant (with international regulations). The reaction was, what's the fuss? [The Act is] not implemented yet, in April, and the US officials said, over and over, that it was not about the local banking sector but to not allow Hizbullah funding to enter the US banking sector.”
“We had good discussions with Treasury and the State Department. We were not going to argue why (they) did it, it was about making sure there's no collateral damage because of the law,” said Yassine Jaber, a member of the Lebanese Parliament for the Shia-based Amal Movement. “We made the case that Lebanon is compliant (with international regulations). The reaction was, what's the fuss? [The Act is] not implemented yet, in April, and the US officials said, over and over, that it was not about the local banking sector but to not allow Hizbullah funding to enter the US banking sector.”
Hizbullah
was labelled
as a terrorist organisation
by the United States as long
ago as 1997
(http://www.state.gov/j/ct/rls/other/des/123085.htm), a designation
also applied by France, Israel, Australia, Canada, and the
Netherlands. Meanwhile,
Britain, the European Union
(EU)
and New Zealand differentiate between Hizbullah's political and
military wings, labelling the latter a terrorist organisation, while
acknowledging that it has 12 seats in the
Lebanese Parliament.
Political
dictation
The
Act is considered a political move following the international deal
with Iran. “The sanctions are a reward to the Gulf countries and
the Israelis, that the US is still committed to their security. That
is the real reason, as the US knows such sanctions will not have any
real influence over Hizbullah's policies or agenda,” said Hussam
Matar, a Lebanese researcher. Hizbullah having been under intense
scrutiny for decades (it was founded in 1982), the new designation
came was
no great surprise.
“The law against Hizbullah did not come with totally new
provisions, as a good part of the provisions of the new law was
possible under the US Patriot Act. But as usual, US law has
far-reaching impact, and financial institutions are scrutinising
[clients] more closely in order to not expose themselves as well as
their correspondent banks,” said Abdul Hafiz Mansour, secretary of
the Special Investigations Unit – the country's Financial
Intelligence Unit (FIU).
Out
of scope?
Hizbullah's
secretary-general Hassan Nasrallah, gave a televised addressed
following the US move, in which he said the party held no accounts in
Lebanon. It is presumed that Hizbullah uses cash for its
transactions, while the Act specifically concerns US dollars and not
Lebanese Pounds.
Within
Lebanon, with the party a legal entity, there is little AML
authorities can or would do to restrict Hizbullah's finances in any
case.
Mansour's
explanation probably says it all: “The Financial Action Task Force
(FATF) recommends the protection of the international financial
system from being abused. Accordingly, the AML/CFT and financial
regulators' realm of operation is the formal financial sector. In
this regard, any dealings in cash outside the formal financial sector
is outside the realm of the AML/CFT regulators, it falls within the
scope of police work. The FIU does not have the capacity, by law or
institutionally, to go after cash or financial operations outside the
formal financial sector.”
Despite
Nasrallah's claims, repeated at the FIU and by Jaber, Nicholas Noe,
co-founder of regional
newswire Mideastwire.com in
Beirut, is more questioning
of
Hizbullah's financial operations. “Treasury's push back was that
you had the LCB case, the (DEA) allegations of drug trafficking, and
over the last year, the head of MEA Bank was charged by the US for
links
to Hizbullah, so it is not exactly true nothing is going through the
financial system,” said
Noe. “For a super secret
party it is not just about the party, but supporters and informal
networks moving cash, so inevitably money is in the financial system
via people that materially support Hizbullah,” he said.
US
intelligence report
The
FIU and financial institutions are awaiting scheduled release of a
report (within 120 days from 15 April 2016) from the White House into
Hizbullah's activities; with expected accompanying regulations to
“prohibit or impose strict conditions on the opening or maintaining
in the United States of a correspondent account or a payable-through
account by a foreign financial institution that the President
determines”.
According
to public statements by Nasrallah, the party's funding is primarily
from Iran while weaponry is received
from Syria. Funds are presumed to come via Syria. “There is an open
border with Syria, so cash comes from there,” said a
compliance officer who
requested anonymity.
Other
than the funding from narcotics and
trade-based money laundering reported
by the DEA, Hizbullah raises money domestically through donations and
using proxies, added the compliance
officer. According to a
leaked
US embassy cable from 2007, Hizbullah's social services and
employment network spends an
estimated US$600 million a year “in payments and services to
supportive Shia, Sunnis, and Christians not receiving those services
from the government,” which is not widely known for providing
effective services to the people of Lebanon.
Matar
said that as Hizbullah is well integrated into Lebanese society, the
new sanctions would not have a major impact, and the party would
leverage sanctions-busting knowledge from Iran. “The
Iranians went through this, so Hizbullah will not find it a problem,”
he added.
Viewing restrictions
Al
Manar television channel, the party's mouthpiece, was specifically
targeted under the Act, with the April
regulations
detailing “satellite, broadcast,
Internet, or other providers that have knowingly entered into a
contractual relationship with al-Manar TV and its affiliates”.
The
US' designation led to Al Manar being dropped from Arab League-backed
satellite provider ArabSat, and,
on 6 April, by Egypt's
NileSat. “Most
of the damage happened to Al Manar, targeted in a special paragraph,
and we are waiting to see how it will be defined,” said Jaber.
The channel's website, almanar.com.lb, is not expected to be affected
as the domain name was issued within Lebanon while the website itself
is registered in the name of a journalist, not the channel, according
to a member of domain registry, the Lebanese Internet Centre (LINC).
The journalist would have to be named by the US authorities for there
to be any action, and a Lebanese court order would be required to
shutdown the website, added the LINC member.
According to the compliance officer, Al Manar pays staff in cash,
while purchases of broadcasting equipment is via intermediaries.
Neighbours lose patience
While
the US move was not unexpected, regional action was, despite the long
history of animosity between Sunni Muslim governments and Shia Iran
and Hizbullah. The terrorist
organisation designation was also made by the
Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC)
countries, with
the Arab
League
designation supported by all
members bar Lebanon and Iraq
(both with significant Shia
populations). “The GCC is
trying to say to Lebanon, you are (collectively) paying the price of
Hizbullah's regional actions in Syria and Yemen,” said Matar. The
GCC is opposed to the Syrian regime, which Hizbullah and Iran are
supporting militarily, while a GCC force, led by Saudi Arabia, is
fighting the Iranian-backed Houthis in Yemen.
The GCC action could potentially have more of a negative impact on
Lebanon, as the Gulf monarchies are less predictable than the US, but
they do not have the specific financial regulatory means to enforce
such a designation, said the compliance officer. However, given how
“fragile and vulnerable” Lebanon is, the GCC also “toned down
their attack after the US and EU talked to them”, Jaber noted.
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