Illegal Spanish Banks Finance al-Qaeda

Today the Spanish newspaper El País revealed that the terror network of al-Qaeda controls dozens of illegal banks in Spain, which transfer over 300 million euro per year from Spain to Muslim countries. The illegal banks operate a system called hawala. The unofficial private banks linked to al-Qaeda are run by some 200 Pakistanis servicing 100,000 customers. Hawala banks operate from various small stores, such as butchers and groceries, and act as savings banks for islamic immigrants in Spain. They are frequently used by the immigrants to transfer money to their home countries. For their services the hawala charge a commission which is lower than the money charged for similar services by official banks.

According to the Spanish intelligence services the hawala play an important role in financing terrorism as part of the commission they charge their customers is used to sponsor al-Qaeda. The involvement of hawala in terrorist activities has already been know for years. El País writes that the Spanish authorities are finding it difficult to discover who is running the unofficial banks and who are the customers. The paper also refers to a declaration of the Algerian president Abdelaziz Bouteflika earlier this year in which he said that the hawala network should be dismantled in order to be able to effectively fight terrorism. Of course, one reason why governments do not like hawala banks is that these do not pay taxes to them but to bin-Laden instead. Hence, an obvious way to tackle the hawala system would be to make it cheaper for customers to use regular banks rather than to rely on the hawala.

Response

Lower bank rates.... there is an idea.

These are aparently used in the US as well, the systems are used to get badly needed funds to otherwise inpoverished states. It is a huge economic asset in some areas.

The key issue is that they arn't paying taxes. If they are making money then they should be paying taxes right....

If bin laden is truely getting these funds, then wouldn't it be fairly easy to trace the money?

They have an underground system.

regulation

There is also a moral hazard aspect here, as the government will be the one to deal with a bankfailure, which is the reason governments started regulating banks in the first place.

Hawala

The hawala concept was praised by Dale Davidson and Lord William Rees-Mogg in their book "The Sovereign Individual" (1999) as a good example of flexible private financial structures that are escaping control by governments.

I sometimes think that if terrorism didn't exist, big government would have to invent it in order to justify its existence, e.g. for the control of international money flows.

It is a fact that after 9/11 the futurologists that had been predicting the end of the nation state (like Davidson and Rees-Mogg, but also professor Ian Angell of the London School of Economics with his 'New Barbarian Manifesto') have become deafeningly silent.