Wednesday 9 September 2009

Clifford Chance advises Islamic Development Bank on an update of its US$1.5bn sukuk programme

Client Work

The programme was originally established in 2005 and this update made a number of Shari'a related structural changes to reflect developments since the programme was established as well as increase the programme size to US$1.5 billion.

The Clifford Chance team worked closely with The Islamic Development Bank and its Shari'a scholars to update this novel sukuk-al-isthismar sukuk programme within the precepts of Shari'a. The programme provides for the issuance of both floating rate and fixed rate certificates. Trust Certificates issued under the programme may be admitted to listing on the official list of the United Kingdom Financial Services Authority and to trading on the London Stock Exchange.
The availability of the sukuk programme will assist The Islamic Development Bank to continue fostering the economic development and social progress of its member countries and Muslim communities.

Deutsche Bank AG, London Branch and HSBC Bank plc were the joint arrangers and dealers of the programme.

Qudeer Latif, Partner and Head of Islamic finance, comments: "Our relationship with the Islamic Development Bank spans back many years and we are delighted to have worked with the IDB again for this successful and innovative update of their programme.
]
The IDB has always been at the forefront of Islamic market developments and this transaction is no exception. We also congratulate the IDB on two successful new issuances under the programme in continuing difficult global market conditions".

The Clifford Chance team in Dubai was led by Qudeer Latif, Partner, Global Head of Islamic Finance and comprised of Bilal Ahmad (Senior Associate) and Shauaib Mirza (Associate). The Clifford Chance team in Madrid comprised of Antonio Henriquez (Senior Associate) and Patrizia Nowakowski (Trainee).

The Rest @ Clifford Chance

Thursday 18 June 2009

Sheikh Saleh Kamel and Al Baraka part of Islamic Super Bank Stikhlafm,

Adnan Yousif wants to build the first truly global Islamic bank

MOST practitioners of Islamic finance pride themselves on their modesty. But not Adnan Yousif, the chairman of the Union of Arab Banks, a regional club for financial firms. He has recently struck a tone more reminiscent of greed-is-good Wall Street, with a grand plan to build the biggest Islamic bank yet seen, spanning the world and providing Muslim countries with new financial services their people have barely heard of. “People never thought big here, never thought globally,” he says.

Mr Yousif’s ambitions date to the founding of modern Islamic finance. During the 1970s oil boom the Gulf’s Muslim elite needed to put their new-found wealth somewhere, and American government bonds seemed the safest option.

Yet Islam prohibits the charging of interest. So some sheikhs bought bonds but let their Western banks keep the interest, in the casual manner of a customer leaving change on a restaurant table.

To Mr Yousif, then a young banker at American Express in his native Bahrain, this made no sense. At a time when Muslim countries had imposed an oil embargo over America’s support for Israel why, he wondered, refuse the Americans oil but give them billions of dollars?

The embargo faltered and ever more money flowed to the Gulf, prompting Muslim scholars to seek ways to cleanse finance of interest payments. Practical men like Mr Yousif paid attention.

In 1980 he moved to Arab Banking Corporation, a Bahraini bank, and set up an Islamic-finance division. It was little more than a few desks in a bare room where white-robed bankers created investments that generated profits in forms other than interest.

The bank’s bosses thought it would be, at best, a niche business with little chance of competing against Western-style finance.

  • But over the next two decades Islamic banking prospered, driven by a revival of faith following the Iranian revolution in 1979.
  • By the turn of the century there were more than 200 Islamic banks and Mr Yousif was leading from the front. He turned his bank’s Islamic-finance division into a stand-alone institution, then became chief executive of Bahrain Islamic Bank in 2002.
  • Two years later, now head of the Al Baraka Group, another Bahraini bank, he oversaw its initial public offering (IPO), the largest thus far by an Islamic bank.

Along the way, interest-avoidance schemes became ever more sophisticated. Today $700 billion of global assets are said to comply with sharia law. Even so, traditional finance houses rather than Islamic institutions continue to handle most Gulf oil money and other Muslim wealth.

In private, some Gulf bankers speak of the need for an “Islamic Goldman Sachs”. That is what Mr Yousif is now attempting to create—a sharia-compliant investment bank with global reach and ready access to capital. It will be called Istikhlaf, Arabic for “doing God’s work”.

Others in the industry have welcomed the move. “Islamic banking cannot be taken seriously until we have some global Islamic banks,” says Simon Eedle, managing director of Islamic banking at Calyon, a French investment bank. “They don’t have to be present everywhere in the world, but they need to be in the top 100.”

  • Mr Yousif says he has raised $3.5 billion from Gulf investors and is seeking the same again by the end of the year.
  • In addition he plans a $3 billion IPO in Dubai and Bahrain. The oil price is down from last year’s peak, but there is plenty of cash in the region looking for a home.
  • So far, though, most of what Mr Yousif has collected comes from other banks rather than private investors.
  • He and his backers, including Sheikh Saleh Kamel, the force behind the Al Baraka Group, delayed the launch of Istikhlaf last year after turbulence in the financial markets.
  • They also dropped talk of raising up to $100 billion—at least for now.

Even with a more modest capital base of $10 billion, Istikhlaf will stand a reasonable chance of picking up lucrative finance deals.

The region’s ubiquitous infrastructure projects need beefy backers. Most Islamic banks have so far been absent from this field because of their small size.

Deals instead went to sharia-compliant units of multinationals like Deutsche Bank, HSBC and Citigroup. These will now face stronger local competition.Mr Yousif’s ambitions do not end there.

  • He plans to create a team of venture-capital researchers to sift through innovators’ ideas and provide the good ones with a cradle-to-IPO service.
  • Many people do this successfully in Silicon Valley, but potential investors in his bank may wonder how easy it will be to transplant that sort of high-technology entrepreneurship to the Gulf.

You say sukuk, I say heresy


More worrying still, the rules for Islamic finance are not uniform around the world.

  • A Kuwaiti Muslim cannot buy a Malaysian sukuk (sharia-compliant bond) because of differing definitions of what constitutes usury. Indeed, a respected Islamic jurist recently denounced most sukuk as godless.
  • Nor are banking licences granted easily in most Muslim countries. That is why big Islamic banks are so weak. Often they are little more than loose collections of subsidiaries.
  • They also lack home-grown talent: most senior staff are poached from multinationals.

There are worries, too, about Istikhlaf’s lack of a Saudi presence or partner.

  • There have been rumours of a merger with Saudi Investment Bank, although Mr Yousif has denied this. Such a deal would be a big help. Saudi Arabia is one of the main growth areas for Islamic banking. It has the largest oil reserves and the most valuable project-finance deals.
  • It is no coincidence therefore that the biggest Islamic bank to date, Al Rajhi, is Saudi.

But if anyone can snatch the lead from the Saudis it is Mr Yousif. Never afraid of breaking the mould, he confesses to admiring Alan Greenspan, a man (of Jewish origins) better known as a disciple of Ayn Rand, the prophet of rugged capitalism, than as a scholar of holy scripture. Mr Yousif has read the former Fed chairman’s memoirs “three or four times”, he says. With luck he will heed Mr Greenspan’s warnings about irrational exuberance.

The Rest @ The Economist

Tuesday 24 March 2009

Islamic Financial Services Board

Islamic Financial Services Board

Membership List: Do they do business with Sudan? Sudan seems to think so.

ABC Islamic Bank (E.C.)
Bahrain
Observer Member
2.
Absa Bank
South Africa
Observer Member
3.
Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank
United Arab Emirates
Observer Member
4.
Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank
United Arab Emirates
Observer Member
5.
Affin Islamic Bank Berhad
Malaysia
Observer Member
6.
Ahli Bank QSC
Qatar
Observer Member
7.
Ahli United Bank
Bahrain
Observer Member
8.
Al Baraka Bank Lebanon
Lebanon
Observer Member
9.
Al Hilal Bank
United Arab Emirates
Observer Member
10.
Al Rajhi Banking and Investment Corporation (Malaysia) Bhd.
Malaysia
Observer Member
11.
Al Rowad Financial Services Co.
Sudan
Observer Member
12.
Al Safa Islamic Banking, Commercial Bank of Qatar
Qatar
Observer Member
13.
Al Salam Bank
Bahrain
Observer Member
14.
Al Salam Bank
Sudan
Observer Member
15.
Al-Jazira Bank
Saudi Arabia
Observer Member
16.
Al-Muthanna Investment Company
Kuwait
Observer Member
17.
Al-Rajhi Banking and Investment Corporation
Saudi Arabia
Observer Member
18.
Albaraka Banking Group
Bahrain
Observer Member
19.
Albaraka Turkish Finance House
Turkey
Observer Member
20.
Algazeera Sudanese Jordanian Bank
Sudan
Observer Member
21.
Allied Cooperative Insurance Group
Saudi Arabia
Observer Member
22.
AmIslamic Bank Berhad
Malaysia
Observer Member
23.
Amlak Finance
United Arab Emirates
Observer Member
24.
Animal Resources Bank
Sudan
Observer Member
25.
Arab Islamic Bank
Palestine
Observer Member
26.
Arbah Capital
Saudi Arabia
Observer Member
27.
Arcapita Bank
Bahrain
Observer Member
28.
AREF Investment Group
Kuwait
Observer Member
29.
Asian Development Bank
International Inter Governmental Organizations
Associate Member
30.
Asian Finance Bank Berhad
Malaysia
Observer Member
31.
A�ayan Leasing and Investment Co.
Kuwait
Observer Member
32.
Badr Al Islami
United Arab Emirates
Observer Member
33.
Bahrain Islamic Bank
Bahrain
Observer Member
34.
Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas
Philippines
Associate Member
35.
Bangladesh Bank
Bangladesh
Full Member
36.
Bank Al-Maghrib
Morocco
Observer Member
37.
Bank Asya
Turkey
Observer Member
38.
Bank for International Settlements
International Inter Governmental Organizations
Associate Member
39.
Bank Indonesia
Indonesia
Full Member
40.
Bank Islam Brunei Darussalam Berhad
Brunei
Observer Member
41.
Bank Islam Malaysia Berhad
Malaysia
Observer Member
42.
Bank Kerjasama Rakyat Malaysia Berhad
Malaysia
Observer Member
43.
Bank Keshavarzi
Islamic Republic of Iran
Observer Member
44.
Bank Muamalat Malaysia Berhad
Malaysia
Observer Member
45.
Bank Negara Malaysia
Malaysia
Full Member
46.
Bank of Japan
Japan
Observer Member
47.
Bank of Mauritius
Mauritius
Associate Member
48.
Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ (Malaysia) Berhad
Malaysia
Observer Member
49.
Bank Saderat Iran
Islamic Republic of Iran
Observer Member
50.
Banque Centrale De Djibouti
Djibouti
Full Member
51.
Banque du Liban
Lebanon
Associate Member
52.
BNP Paribas Islamic Banking Unit
Bahrain
Observer Member
53.
Boubyan Bank
Kuwait
Observer Member
54.
Bursa Malaysia Berhad
Malaysia
Associate Member
55.
Byblos Bank Africa Ltd
Sudan
Observer Member
56.
Cagamas
Malaysia
Observer Member
57.
Capital Market Authority of Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia
Full Member
58.
Capital Market Development Authority
Maldives
Associate Member
59.
Central Bank of Bahrain
Bahrain
Full Member
60.
Central Bank of Egypt
Egypt
Full Member
61.
Central Bank of Jordan
Jordan
Full Member
62.
Central Bank of Kuwait
Kuwait
Full Member
63.
Central Bank of Sudan
Sudan
Full Member
64.
Central Bank of Syria
Syria
Full Member
65.
Central Bank of the Islamic Republic of Iran
Islamic Republic of Iran
Full Member
66.
Central Bank of the United Arab Emirates
United Arab Emirates
Full Member
67.
Commerce International Merchant Bankers Berhad (CIMB)
Malaysia
Observer Member
68.
Commercial Bank International
United Arab Emirates
Observer Member
69.
Commercial Bank of Dubai
United Arab Emirates
Observer Member
70.
Deutsche Bank AG
United Arab Emirates
Observer Member
71.
Doha Bank
Qatar
Observer Member
72.
Dow Jones Indexes
United States of America
Observer Member
73.
Dubai Bank
United Arab Emirates
Observer Member
74.
Dubai Financial Services Authority
United Arab Emirates
Associate Member
75.
Dubai International Financial Centre Authority
United Arab Emirates
Associate Member
76.
Dubai International Financial Exchange
United Arab Emirates
Observer Member
77.
Dubai Islamic Bank
United Arab Emirates
Observer Member
78.
Dubai Islamic Bank Pakistan Limited
Pakistan
Observer Member
79.
Dubai Islamic Insurance and Reinsurance Co.
United Arab Emirates
Observer Member
80.
Egyptian Saudi Finance Bank
Egypt
Observer Member
81.
Emirates Islamic Bank
United Arab Emirates
Observer Member
82.
Emirates Securities and Commodities Authority
United Arab Emirates
Associate Member
83.
EONCAP Islamic Bank Berhad
Malaysia
Observer Member
84.
European Islamic Investment Bank PLC
United Kingdom
Observer Member
85.
Faisal Islamic Bank
Egypt
Observer Member
86.
Farmer�s Commercial Bank
Sudan
Observer Member
87.
Financial Services Commission & Financial Supervisory Service
Korea
Observer Member
88.
First Habib Modaraba
Pakistan
Observer Member
89.
First Investment Company
Kuwait
Observer Member
90.
Fitch Ratings Singapore Pte Ltd
Singapore
Observer Member
91.
FWU Group
Germany
Observer Member
92.
Gatehouse Bank plc
United Kingdom
Observer Member
93.
Guidance Financial Group LLC
United States of America
Observer Member
94.
Gulf Investment House
Kuwait
Observer Member
95.
Hannover ReTakaful B.S.C
Bahrain
Observer Member
96.
Hong Kong Monetary Authority
Hong Kong
Associate Member
97.
Hong Leong Islamic Bank
Malaysia
Observer Member
98.
HSBC Amanah Finance
United Arab Emirates
Observer Member
99.
Industrial Development Bank
Sudan
Observer Member
100.
Insurance Commission of Jordan
Jordan
Observer Member
101.
International Leasing and Investment Company
Kuwait
Observer Member
102.
International Monetary Fund
International Inter Governmental Organizations
Associate Member
103.
Investment Dar
Kuwait
Observer Member
104.
Islami Bank Bangladesh Limited
Bangladesh
Observer Member
105.
Islamic Corporation for the Development of Private Sector Sector
International Inter Governmental Organizations
Associate Member
106.
Islamic Corporation for the Insurance of Investment and Export Credit
Saudi Arabia
Observer Member
107.
Islamic Development Bank
International Inter Governmental Organizations
Full Member
108.
Islamic International Rating Agency
Bahrain
Observer Member
109.
Japan Bank for International Cooperation
Japan
Observer Member
110.
Japan Securities and Dealers Association
Japan
Observer Member
111.
Jordan Islamic Bank for Finance and Investment
Jordan
Observer Member
112.
Khaleeji Commercial Bank B.S.C.
Bahrain
Observer Member
113.
Kuwait Finance House
Kuwait
Observer Member
114.
Kuwait Finance House (Malaysia) Berhad
Malaysia
Observer Member
115.
Kuwait Finance House-Bahrain
Bahrain
Observer Member
116.
Kuwait International Bank, Kuwait
Kuwait
Observer Member
117.
Kuwait Turkish Participation Bank
Turkey
Observer Member
118.
Labuan Offshore Financial Services Authority
Malaysia
Associate Member
119.
Lembaga Tabung Haji
Malaysia
Observer Member
120.
Malaysia Deposit Insurance Corporation
Malaysia
Associate Member
121.
Malaysian Rating Corporation Berhad
Malaysia
Observer Member
122.
Maldives Monetary Authority
Maldives
Full Member
123.
Masraf Al Rayan
Qatar
Observer Member
124.
Maybank Investment Bank Berhad
Malaysia
Observer Member
125.
Ministry of Economy and Finances
Senegal
Observer Member
126.
Ministry of Finance, Brunei
Brunei
Full Member
127.
Mitsubishi UFJ Securities Co., Ltd.
Japan
Observer Member
128.
Mizuho Corporate Bank Ltd.
Japan
Observer Member
129.
Monetary Authority of Singapore
Singapore
Full Member
130.
National Bank of Dubai
United Arab Emirates
Observer Member
131.
National Bank of Umm Al Qawain
United Arab Emirates
Observer Member
132.
National Commercial Bank
Saudi Arabia
Observer Member
133.
Nomura Asset Management Malaysia Sdn Bhd
Malaysia
Observer Member
134.
Nomura Securities Co. Ltd.
Japan
Observer Member
135.
Oasis Crescent Capital (PTY) Ltd.
South Africa
Observer Member
136.
Omdurman National Bank
Sudan
Observer Member
137.
Palestine Monetary Authority
Palestine
Associate Member
138.
Perbadanan Tabung Amanah Islam Brunei
Brunei
Observer Member
139.
Qatar Central Bank
Qatar
Full Member
140.
Qatar Financial Centre Regulatory Authority
Qatar
Associate Member
141.
Qatar International Islamic Bank
Qatar
Observer Member
142.
Qatar Islamic Bank
Qatar
Observer Member
143.
Qatar National Bank
Qatar
Observer Member
144.
Rasameel Structures Finance Company
Kuwait
Observer Member
145.
RHB Islamic Bank Berhad
Malaysia
Observer Member
146.
RUSD Investment Bank, Labuan
Malaysia
Observer Member
147.
SALAMA - Islamic Arab Insurance Co.
United Arab Emirates
Observer Member
148.
Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency
Saudi Arabia
Full Member
149.
Saudi British Bank
Saudi Arabia
Observer Member
150.
Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan
Pakistan
Associate Member
151.
Securities and Futures Commission
Hong Kong
Observer Member
152.
Securities Commission of Malaysia
Malaysia
Full Member
153.
Seera Investment Bank
Bahrain
Observer Member
154.
Shariyah Review Board
Bahrain
Observer Member
155.
Sharjah Islamic Bank
United Arab Emirates
Observer Member
156.
Shiekan Insurance and Reinsurance Co. Ltd
Sudan
Observer Member
157.
State Bank of Pakistan
Pakistan
Full Member
158.
Sudan Financial Services Company
Sudan
Observer Member
159.
Sudanese Banks Association
Sudan
Observer Member
160.
Sudanese French Bank
Sudan
Observer Member
161.
Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation, Japan
Japan
Observer Member
162.
Syarikat Takaful Malaysia Berhad
Malaysia
Observer Member
163.
Tadamon Islamic Bank
Sudan
Observer Member
164.
Takaful Ikhlas Sdn. Bhd.
Malaysia
Observer Member
165.
The Insurance Supervisory Authority
Sudan
Associate Member
166.
The Islamic Bank of Asia, Singapore
Singapore
Observer Member
167.
The Islamic Insurance Co. Plc
Jordan
Observer Member
168.
The National Pensions Fund
Sudan
Observer Member
169.
The People Bank of China
China
Associate Member
170.
The Securities House
Kuwait
Observer Member
171.
The World Bank
International Inter Governmental Organizations
Associate Member
172.
Tokio Marine Middle East Limited
United Arab Emirates
Observer Member
173.
UBS AG, Dubai
United Arab Emirates
Observer Member
174.
UM Financial Inc.
Canada
Observer Member
175.
Unicorn International Islamic Bank Malaysia Berhad
Malaysia
Observer Member
176.
Unicorn Investment Bank
Bahrain
Observer Member
177.
Venture Capital Bank B.S.C (c)
Bahrain
Observer Member
178.
Wethaq Takaful Insurance Company K.C.S.C.
Kuwait
Observer Member

Sunday 18 January 2009

Sukuk Failing in Malasia

MALAYSIAN property developer IJM Land may scrap plans to sell Islamic bonds and take out a loan instead to refinance borrowings, a source close to the matter said today.

Syariah bond issuance in Southeast Asia’s most developed Islamic finance market has been virtually frozen by worries about a global recession and sliding asset values, shattering earlier beliefs the industry would escape the downturn largely unscathed.

Islamic bond issuance in Malaysia fell to US$5.86 billion last year, compared with US$26.53 billion in 2007, according to Islamic Finance Information Service. IJM Land, the property arm of infrastructure group IJM Corp, wants to raise about RM300 million-RM400 million, said the source who declined to be identified.

“The market is so volatile it’s kind of difficult to do a bond at this kind of time,” said the source. “Taking a straight loan is much easier than doing a bond. The market risk for bonds, especially for developers, at the current time is kind of challenging.” IJM group managing director Krishnan Tan Boon Seng was not available for comment.

IJM Land had earlier wanted to issue Islamic bonds, or sukuk, to tap growing investor demand in Malaysia for syariah-compliant paper. Top Malaysian lender Maybank has estimated that sukuk accounted for more than half of the RM47 billion of corporate bonds that were issued in the country last year.

The Rest @ Business Times

Hawala Facilitates Human Trafficking Ring in Greece and Pakistan

Monday, January 19, 2009
By Salman Aslam
LAHORE:

The Federal Investigation Agency has arrested three human traffickers -- including the two guilty of a failed attempt to smuggle 13 Pakistanis to Greece, who suffocated in a container in a district adjoining Istanbul on July 30 last -- The News learnt Saturday.

Sources said Mehdi Khan, s/o Muhammad Khan, caste Gujjar, a resident of PO Qila Sora Singh Tehsil, Gujrat district, was one of the arrested, who is an accused in the suffocation case. His name appears at serial number 5 on the Red Book list.

The investigators during interrogation came to know that Mehdi Khan was a general councillor, Union Council Barrila Sharif, Gujrat district.

His two younger brothers
  • Safdar Ali, 40, and
  • M Afzal, 35,

live in Greece. A sister of the accused is married to Sana Ullah, a resident of Gaigian, Gujrat district, who is also a human trafficker.

Out of the seven children, his three elder sons M Riaz, 23, M Abbas, 21, and M Namas, 16, are settled in Greece.

  • The sources said Mehdi Khan booked dozens of people for smuggling to Greece for Rs 500,000 to 600,000.
  • He used Iran-Turkey land route for the purpose. He is associated with human trafficker Haji Abdullah, s/o Agha Inayat r/o Kake Mitter, Wazirabad, Gujranwala district.
  • Haji is operating safe houses in Iran and Turkey.
  • The illegal immigrants are handed over to Haji Abdullah at Taftan on Pak-Iran border and trafficked forward through Iran.
  • The trafficking starts right from Balochistan to Iran and Turkey and illegal immigrants are further smuggled to Greece through boats.
  • Mehdi Khan was involved in FIA case numbers 27 and 34 registered with its office in Gujranwala.

A number of enquiries based on deportees’ statements are pending against him to be converted to cases. The other human trafficker arrested by the FIA has been identified as Mamoon-ur-Rasheed alias Steno s/o Subay Khan, caste Mayo, r/o Begowal, Tehsil Sambrial, Sialkot district.

His arrest had been a challenge, given his precautions. He remained a mystery for the last many years as he never met any intending immigrant, or other agent or even any member of his own network. He was arrested on Jan 14, 2009. A case was registered with Sadar Kamoke Police Station against him, his brother Javed and two others — Basharat and Jameel.

The accused also resorted to firing to avoid arrest. The sources informed The News that Mamoon was involved in human trafficking from Pakistan to Europe through land routes in Pakistan, Iran, Turkey and Greece.

He set up a network of sub-agents in the country as well as abroad. He is a trafficker wanted in the highest number of FIA cases.

The accused had got issued two Computerised National Identity Cards in the names of Mamoon and Zahid Rehman.

His three brothers are living abroad: Javed, 30, in Malaysia and Parvaiz Ahmed, 25, and Rashid Ahmed, 20, in Spain. He is involved in 15 cases registered with AHTC Police Station, Gujranwala, bearing FIR numbers 601, 613, 615, 616, 618, 764, 818, 925 of 2006 and 345, 360, 361, 362, 363, 401, 402 and 403 of 2007. Other 15 cases bearing FIR numbers 36 to 50 have now been registered with AHTC police on the basis of deportees’ statements. Owing to his frequent involvement in the illegal business and number of persons he has smuggled, his name appeared in the Red Book 2007.

How it worked

  1. The accused used to deal with intending immigrants directly or through his sub-agents demanding payment ranging from Rs 600,000 to Rs 700,000 preceded by Rs 100,000 advance payment.
  2. The illegal immigrants were handed over to other agents across the unfrequented land routes in Pakistan, Iran, Turkey and Greece.
  3. When illegal immigrants reached their destination, their families paid the remaining amount to the accused through an agent ‘Chacha Rafique’—the owner of Hawala office at Lalamusa, Gujrat district.
  4. The accused handed over intending immigrants to agents based in Karachi, whom he paid Rs15,000 for each.

The Rest @ The News International (Pakistan)

Tuesday 23 December 2008

Islamic Banking in Crisis

Investment bankers from London were flying into once-booming Dubai last night as the bailout of the Gulf state’s banking sector began.

The bank and the finance ministry of the United Arab Emirates have established a AED120 billion emergency funding facility .

Global Investment House KSCC, Kuwait’s biggest investment bank, declined to the lowest in more than four years after appointing HSBC Holdings to renegotiate loans owed to foreign lenders.

Citigroup Inc., the global bank that got a $45 billion government bailout, “recently” arranged more than $8 billion of financing for government-owned companies in Dubai.

Dubai Holding Commercial Operations Group LLC, a company owned by Dubai ruler Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum, said it repaid 2.4 billion dirhams ($650million) of maturing bonds and loans from its own cash flows.

Saturday 8 November 2008

Unnao Hawala Cash Captured while moving from Uttar to Sarjah India

Lucknow, Nov 9 (IANS) Two people were arrested from the Amausi airport in Uttar Pradesh capital late Saturday night while they were allegedly trying to smuggle Hawala money worth Rs.16 million, the police said.

The duo, who were at the airport to take a flight to Sharjah, were caught by the officials of the Directorate of Revenue Intelligence (DRI) under the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA), according to police sources.

“We only know that the arrested persons belong to Unnao and the local police was not involved in the entire operation as it is a matter related to DRI,” Akhil Kumar, senior superintendt of police Lucknow, told IANS over phone.

The paper was in Saudi Ryals and Indian Rupees

The Rest @ ThaIndian