According to charges filed by the US federal prosecutors here, eight persons have been indicted for participating in two worldwide cyber attacks culminating into a huge USD 45 million being withdrawn fraudulently from ATMs across the world in a matter of few hours earlier this year.
The modus operandi for the heist included hacking into computer systems of payment processing companies -- one in the US and another in India -- to compromise the account details of prepaid card account customers of two banks (one in the UAE and another in Muscat). This was followed by unlimited withdrawals from ATMs across the world.
Late last year, a joint probe by British and Swiss regulators found key controls for "detection of suspicious trading activity" failed at an India outsourcing unit, contributing to USD 2.3-billion loss caused by a rogue trader of global banking giant UBS.
Months before that, outsourcing of key oversight jobs by two global banks -- HSBC and Standard Chartered -- to India had come under the regulatory scanner in the US and UK for ineffective controls against suspicious transactions.
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As per an advisory issued by the UK financial market regulator FCA (Financial Conduct Authority) about offshore centres of British banks, the "financial crime training in India needs to be better supported by financial crime teams in the UK".
The FCA said that "fake CVs, inconsistent references, and previous employers being reluctant to provide references or share data were common in India. India does not have the electronic database infrastructure in place to allow fast, effective checking of the bona fides of individuals. So firms need to apply a wide range of strategies to fill this gap."