Pakistan escaped from being placed on the watch-list of countries that have failed to combat terror financing and counter money laundering, state-run Pakistan Television reported.
The Financial Action Task Force (FATF), in a report issued yesterday, named nine countries with "strategic deficiencies," including Iraq, Syria, Yemen and Tunisia. Pakistan escaped mention.
Interior Minister Ahsan Iqbal said that the FATF will decide in June whether to place Pakistan on the 'grey list' of countries with strategic deficiencies that pose a risk to the international financial system.
It was a shock for Pakistan as just two days ago the motion was defeated in the first round of discussion but officials said that the US used its clout to call for a successful second vote, the minister said.
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"The resolution against us was political and used to pressurise Pakistan... We are taking steps not to please the US but for our own benefit. We will follow our own agenda to achieve national goals," Iqbal told reporters in Lahore.
Earlier, Foreign Minister Khawaja Asif had claimed that Pakistan was given a three-month reprieve to take measures to avoid being placed in the 'grey list' of the group.
Currently, the FATF's website shows Ethiopia, Iraq, Serbia, Sri Lanka, Syria, Trinidad and Tobago, Tunisia, Vanuatu and Yemen in the 'grey list'.
Meanwhile, Dawn newspaper reported that Adviser to the Prime Minister on Finance Miftah Ismail, who led Pakistan's FATF moot, said Pakistan is set to be "grey listed" by the FATF in June.
After that, implementation of the plan will begin, monitored by the Asia Pacific Group, a part of the global FATF network, Ismail said.
The failure to build consensus on the action plan could result in placing Pakistan on the black list, which currently applied only to Iran and North Korea, he said.
Ismail said that the 'grey list' status does little more than raising the compliance burden on counterparts, such as correspondent banks, dealing with entities within Pakistan's financial system, and therefore attaches an additional cost to many external sector transactions.
The report said that the accusation against Pakistan was that it had not taken action on some of the entities and individuals designated as terrorists by the UN Security Council Resolution 1267.
More specifically the concern was about Hafiz Saeed's Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD) and Falah-i-Insaniyat Foundation (FIF) being allowed to operate in the country, and Saeed being free to organise rallies and raise funds, it said.
"Pakistan has serious concerns over and objections to the introduction of this new 'nomination' procedure, which is unprecedented and in clear violation of established rules/practices of the FATF," said Foreign Office spokesman Dr Mohammad Faisal.
Similarly, an announcement was also made to deploy troops in Saudi Arabia to meet a key demand of the kingdom in an effort to get the crucial Gulf Cooperation Council vote at the FATF.