International news agency
International News Services archives articles supplied to clients one year or more after initial publication. These articles are protected by a password and not made available to readers without permission from clients. They are used as a background resource by agency journalists. Upon client requests, International News Services will remove such articles from the archive or not upload them in the first place. They are included to demonstrate the breadth of topics undertaken by the agency and also to help promote clients’ coverage.

Search Results for: Research⊂mit=Search

10 results out of 480 results found for 'Research⊂mit=Search'.

ETHIOPIA LOOKS FOR ALTERNATIVE EXPORT MARKETS TO OFFSET EFFECT OF AGOA BAN



The textile and fibre sectors of Ethiopia have been looking to expand domestic sakes as Ethiopia approaches one year anniversary of its exclusion of the USA’s Africa Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA). This process continues even as a new peace deal between the government and rebel Tigray forces is being rolled out, growing hope that Ethiopia may be readmitted to AGOA and its preferential US market access in 2023.…

Read more

COURT CONVICTS USD3.36 BILLION DARK WEB SCAM CRYPTO FRAUDSTER WHO HID BITCOIN IN BATHROOM



The crypto fraudster behind a massive Bitcoin fraud using the notorious former online darknet black market Silk Road, used by drug dealers and other criminals, has been convicted after pleading guilty on November 4 in a New York court. US citizen James Zhong admitted wire fraud when he unlawfully obtained over 50,000 Bitcoin from the Silk Road marketplace in September 2012, one year before it was shut down by US authorities.…

Read more

COUNTRIES OPPOSING RUSSIAN INVASION OF UKRAINE STRUGGLE TO AGREE WAY TO SPEND SANCTIONED MONEY AND PROPERTY



The list of Russian assets seized by its European and north American opponents grows ever larger, with super yachts joining bank accounts and expensive properties being sequestered. But could they be sold? Should they be sold? And should the money be spent on rebuilding Ukraine, if it drives out the Russian invader?…

Read more

UK FRAUD DOWN BUT NATIONAL SECURITY THREAT, SAY BANKS



British banking trade association UK Finance is warning that “the level of fraud in the UK has reached a point where it must be considered a national security threat”. In its ‘2022 half year fraud update’ (1), it said that despite spending billions on fraud prevention, “the banking sector cannot solve this on its own.”…

Read more

FINCEN PUSHES FORWARD WITH IMPLMENTING MAJOR USA AML REFORMS



FinCEN (Financial Crimes Enforcement Network), the USA’s FIU, has been implementing detailed reforms to the country’s AML/CFT regulatory system that had been authorised by the country’s Anti-Money Laundering Act (AMLA). Passed by Congress in January 2021, overriding a veto of former President Donald Trump, a key plank of the reforms has been strengthening the USA’s previously anaemic efforts on UBO controls, which had been found wanting by past FATF MERs.…

Read more

AML INFORMATION EXCHANGE SYSTEMS DEEPEN AND BECOME MORE COMPLEX



The exchange of intelligence is a key element of AML/CFT, with FATF’s recommendations 36 to 40 focusing on international cooperation. The Egmont Group of FIUs also continues to hone how it securely delivers exchanges of sensitive AML/CFT information between its 167 members.…

Read more

ANTI-FRAUD AUTHORS CAN IMPART INVESTIGATIVE TECHNIQUES AND EXPERIENCE, DRAWING ON CASE STUDIES WITH WIT AND INSIGHT



Anti-fraud professionals are offered substantial amounts of training, conferences and mentoring – but a lot can be learned the old-fashioned way – with an informative book. There are guides for the relatively uninitiated. Take ‘The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Private Investigating, Third Edition: Discover How the Pros Uncover the Facts and Get to the Truth’ by Steven Kerry Brown.…

Read more

ASIA REGULATORY ROUND UP



The Indonesian government is ramping up its requirement for government-funded construction to use locally-made products by insisting paint and coatings manufacturers seeking to supply such projects use national standardisation and certifications.

This, said the chairman of the Indonesian Paint and Coatings Association, Markus Winarto, is part of a trade ministry directorate general of chemical, pharmaceutical and textile industries campaign to reduce imported products.…

Read more

ENGLISH-TAUGHT SHORT HIGHER EDUCATION COURSES ON THE RISE IN GREECE



The Greece higher education sector is sharply increasing the number of English-taught short-term higher education (HE) courses that operate in collaboration with foreign universities. According to Christos Michalakelis, co-founder and president of Study in Greece (SiG), the official organisation promoting internationalisation within Greek HE, short-term courses yielding student academic credits, is a stepping stone “towards internationalising Greek universities”.…

Read more

LACK OF RELIABLE DATA UNDERMINES THE GROWTH OF HE IN AFRICA



A lack of reliable data across Africa has weakened policies to improve higher education across the continent, development experts argue. They claim the problem is compromising the achievement of the UN’s Sustainable Development Goal (SDG 4) (1) to leave no one behind in tertiary education by 2030, even though several local data development initiatives are trying to improve the flow of useful statistics.…

Read more