Russia’s central bank announced Wednesday that it was stripping three lenders of their licenses amid suspicions they were engaged in enabling money-laundering and financing of terrorism.
The Bank of Russia said in a statement that Dagestan Bank, Moscow-based Monolit Bank, and the Bank of Business Development in the Siberian city of Kemerovo would no longer be permitted to operate.
The regulator said Dagestan Bank, a lender based in a southern Russian province troubled by a long-running Islamism-fueled insurgency, had processed 1.6 billion rubles ($44.4 million) of suspect funds and failed to comply with internal control rules on combating money laundering and terrorist financing.
Business Development Bank transferred 4.8 billion rubles ($133 million) in suspicious transactions last year, the Bank of Russia said.
The Central Bank stopped short of accusing Monolit, the largest of the three banks, of money laundering, but said it had last year conducted 9 billion rubles’ worth ($250 million) of suspicious transactions, failed to serve clients in a timely manner and engaged in a credit policy that was too high-risk.
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Press release links from Central Bank regarding the three banks: Commercial Bank Monolit; Commercial Bank of Social Development Dagestan; Razvitiya Biznesa.