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Western Union Profiles Muslim Names
Money transfer agencies like Western Union have delayed or blocked thousands of cash deliveries on suspicion of terrorist connections simply because senders or recipients have names like Mohammed or Ahmed, company officials said.
In one example, an Indian driver here said Western Union prevented him from sending US$120 to a friend at home this month because the
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| Wednesday, July 5,2006 00:00 | |||||||||
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Money transfer agencies like Western Union have delayed or blocked thousands of cash deliveries on suspicion of terrorist connections simply because senders or recipients have names like Mohammed or Ahmed, company officials said. In one example, an Indian driver here said Western Union prevented him from sending US$120 to a friend at home this month because the recipient’s name was Mohammed. In a similar case, Pakistani Qadir Khan said Western Union blocked his attempt this month to wire money to his brother, Mohammed, for a cataract operation. In many cases, would-be customers like Maruthayil simply find another way to send the funds - often through informal exchanges with less stringent monitoring. In Washington, US Treasury spokeswoman Molly Millerwise said foreign banks have used the department’s list of terrorist names to freeze US$150 million in assets since it was released after Sept. 11. Millerwise didn’t know the value of money transfers blocked using the list, but she said frustrations endured by those with certain names were regrettable but necessary. The list of names, available on the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control Web site, contains hundreds of Mohammeds. The money transfer crackdown comes amid revelations that the US Treasury and CIA have tracked millions of confidential financial transactions handled by the Belgium-based Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication, or SWIFT. In Dubai, a Western Union branch manager said he was forced to obey US rules he and others consider too broad. At another Western Union office, an executive who deals with security measures said about 1 percent of the store’s 30,000 daily money transfers - about 300 a day - are delayed or blocked because of suspected terrorist links. Thus far, all have proven false, the executive said on condition of anonymity, because she wasn’t permitted to speak to the press. The US regulations apply to Western Union money transfers made anywhere, said Marc Aubry, the company’s Dubai-based Mideast marketing director. The US Treasury Department has worked with the Emirati government in tightening oversight after a 2004 US investigation found that most of the US$400,000 spent on the Sept. 11 attacks passed through bank accounts in the Emirates, a Mideast banking hub. Dubai expatriates like Khan and Maruthayil say Western Union, which says it earns US$3 billion annually from its operations in 200 countries, have no valid basis for delaying or blocking much-needed cash meant for families back home. Related Topics: Call for Reconciliation |
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Posted in MB and West , Reports |
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