Qatari financier helped blacklisted terrorists by using UN loopholes
Lenient monitoring and loopholes within the United
Nations’ Security Council sanctions procedures have allowed blacklisted
terrorists with Al-Qaeda and Daesh gain access to frozen bank accounts, the
Wall Street Journal reported.
Among those sanctioned, but gaining access to their
accounts, is Qatari financier Khalifa al-Subaiy, who the US says provided
significant financial support to Al-Qaeda and 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh
Mohammed.
Al-Subaiy, who was added to the UN terror blacklist
in 2008, has been withdrawing funds up to $10,000 from frozen accounts for
“basic necessities.” Home countries of blacklisted individuals apply for UN
exemptions to sanctions that allow access to small amounts of money in order to
pay for living expenses and food.
However, the exemptions procedure is “too loosely
structured and lacks oversight,” the report added.
UN officials accuse countries such as Qatar of not
sufficiently monitoring blacklisted terrorists living within its borders.
“Exemptions are granted to virtually anyone who asks
and for amounts that are sometimes seen as unjustifiably large; requests don't
adequately detail needs as required; and there are no spending audits,” the
report by the WSJ read.
The UN has publicly alleged that a series of
disclosures showed Al-Subaiy, a former Qatar central-bank official, continuing
to finance terrorists and their activities through 2013.
“I would be hard-pressed to find someone more
prominent than him in the whole terrorism financing side,” said Hans-Jakob
Schindler, a senior director at the Counter Extremism Project and former
adviser to the UN Security Council, told WSJ.