Bank staff blind eye to terror financing

Original article by Sam Buckingham-Jones
The Australian – Page: 5 : 13-Jul-17

AUSTRAC has concluded that Australian financial services providers such as banks should be doing more to identify and report financial transactions that may involve money laundering or terrorism financing. It contends that front-line staff in particular have a key role in identifying such activity, but they may not be doing so as they have a focus on client retention. AUSTRAC noted that 60 per cent of trading and ­settling organisations failed to report any suspicious activity in the two years to March 2016.

CORPORATES
AUSTRALIA. ATTORNEY-GENERAL’S DEPT. AUSTRALIAN TRANSACTION REPORTS AND ANALYSIS CENTRE

Lindt siege payouts may depend on terrorist decision

Original article by Mathew Dunckley, Lisa Visentin
The Australian Financial Review – Page: 3 : 5-Jan-15

The Australian Reinsurance Pool Corporation is empowered by law to gauge the losses incurred by businesses in a terrorism event. It can also, if appropriate, reduce the liability of insurance companies in such cases, and providers including Insurance Australia Group are waiting for a decision by the Federal Government on the 15-16 December 2014 siege at the Lindt Cafe in Sydney’s Martin Place. Some small businesses have lodged claims under optional business disruption clauses, and will need to find out whether the siege is indeed deemed a terrorist act

CORPORATES
INSURANCE AUSTRALIA GROUP LIMITED – ASX IAG, AUSTRALIAN REINSURANCE POOL CORPORATION, AUSTRALIA. DEPT OF THE TREASURY, LINDT AND SPRUNGLI (AUSTRALIA) PTY LTD, AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL RETAILERS ASSOCIATION LIMITED, AUSTRALIAN RETAILERS ASSOCIATION, CGU INSURANCE AUSTRALIA LIMITED, LUMLEY INSURANCE GROUP LIMITED, WFI INSURANCE