Filthy rich? Islamic State makes nearly $20M a month in stock market investment scheme.(Albawaba).
Islamic State [Daesh] militants
are earning up to £14 million (approximately $20 million) a month by
funneling cash looted from Iraqi banks into legitimate currency
speculation.
The group
seized hundreds of millions of dollars when it ransacked Mosul banks in
June 2014, giving it the means to re-inject the cash back into
unsuspecting foreign markets.
Yesterday a Foreign Affairs sub-committee heard that this money is routed into financial markets in Jordan, where it is used to play the stock market and then rewired back to ISIS operatives in Iraq.
The move into such a sophisticated method of money laundering provides another platform for the group's funding, along with its well-established oil production, extortion, and harsh local taxes.
The hearing heard ISIS was funding
its stock market gambles with money taken from Iraqi civil servants'
pension payments as well as looted cash, The Daily Telegraph reported.
Using
the alternative acronym ISIL to refer to the group, MP John Baron, the
sub-committee's chair, said: 'The cash that ISIL has looted, along with
siphoned off pension payments, is routed into Jordanian banks and
brought back into the system via Baghdad.
'That
allows the system to be exploited by ISIL, in that they take a turn on
the foreign currency actions and siphon that cash back.'
The
siphoned cash is returned to ISIS operatives by the 'hawala' system of
money transfer, an informal transfer system common in the Middle East,
the paper reported.
It requires brokers, who know and trust one another, to act and the depositing and withdrawal points for individuals willing to transfer cash to one another.
As
the money is not actually shifted between the brokers, they settle the
debt incurred by the individuals' withdrawal with one another at a later
point.
With an estimated £1.3billion ($1.84
billion) fortune, the group can afford not only to pay foreign fighters
who join its cause in the Middle East, but easily expand beyond its
borders to launch attacks in the West.
Though
figures of its wealth vary widely, one report estimated it was selling
£1million ($1.41 million) per day in crude oil and kidnappings were
worth £30million ($42.2 million) per annum.
As
well as these income streams, it was enforcing taxes of 20 per cent
across a population of 10 million, and controlled 40 per cent of Iraq's
wheat production. Read the full story here.
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