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CRIME

Denmark charges bank Nordea over massive money laundering accusations

Denmark has charged the Nordic bank Nordea with laundering 3.5 billion euros ($3.8 billion) for Russian clients, the country's financial prosecutors said Friday.

Denmark charges bank Nordea over massive money laundering accusations
Denmark has charged Nordea on suspicion of money laundering. Photo: Mads Claus Rasmussen/Ritzau Scanpix

“Nordea did not adequately investigate transactions by Russian clients of the bank and ignored warnings about foreign exchange trades in Copenhagen,” Denmark’s National Special Crime Unit said in a statement.

The alleged laundering happened between 2012 and 2015.

Nordea, which is based in Helsinki, said it expected to pay a fine and had set money aside for provisions in 2019.

“We are disappointed that this affair has been brought in front of the courts,” Nordea’s chief legal counsel Anders Holkmann Olsen said in a statement. “Nordea has recognised on several occasions that at the time there were lapses in our systems and processes for fighting financial crime.”

The bank said it has spent 11 billion kroner ($1.6 billion) since 2015 to prevent financial crimes.

No trial date has been set.

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DIPLOMATIC RELATIONS

Danish court rules arms smuggler can’t be extradited to India

A court in Denmark has ruled that a Danish arms smuggler who air-dropped weapons to Indian villagers in 1995 could not be extradited to India, citing the risk that his rights would be violated.

Danish court rules arms smuggler can't be extradited to India

Niels Holck, 62, has admitted to parachuting four tonnes of weapons into the state of West Bengal to help locals fight government authorities.

New Delhi has relentlessly pursued attempts to have him stand trial in India, and the affair has been a stumbling block in Danish-Indian relations.

However, the Hillerød district court ruled that he should not be extradited because there was a “real risk” that he would be “subjected to treatment in India that violates Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights”,  which prohibits torture or inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.

The court noted this was the case despite diplomatic assurances from India that Holck would be housed in a special detention centre during the criminal proceedings in India.

India had said the detention centre would be set up to house only Holck and he could be accompanied by Danish police officers acting as observers.

Holck was the only one of se

ven smugglers who managed to escape after the Indian Air Force intercepted their returning plane.

The others, all European nationals, were sentenced in Kolkata to life imprisonment in 2000, but all were eventually released.

India regards the Dane, also known as Kim Davy, as the mastermind of the operation, which saw the delivery of hundreds of assault rifles, pistols, anti-tank grenades, rocket launchers and thousands of rounds of ammunition.

‘Frustrated’

Holck was arrested in Denmark in April 2010 after Danish authorities reached a deal with India over the terms of his extradition, including a promise that he would not be given the death penalty and would serve any sentence in Denmark.

But a Danish district court in 2011 overturned the authorities’ decision, saying he risked mistreatment in India.

An appeals court later upheld the district court’s ruling.

In 2016, India again requested his extradition.

Holck’s lawyer, Jonas Christoffersen, told AFP they were “very satisfied with the decision” on Thursday.

Christroffersen said he expected the prosecution to appeal the decision, like they did in 2011.

But given that two courts in 2011, and now the district court, had ruled that India could not guarantee his safety, he was confident the ruling would be upheld.

“We would be very surprised to say the least, if the High Court would reach another conclusion this time,” the lawyer said.

Earlier this week, Christoffersen said that his client was tired of the protracted affair.

“He’s frustrated that the case has dragged on for so long,” Christoffersen said.

“Now he’s hopeful that it will come to a close and that once it has gone through the Danish legal system, it will be clear that he will never be extradited to India.”

“He is going on with his life, but he cannot travel. He has his life in Denmark but it’s a burden on him,” he said. “He’s been called a terrorist without any factual merit for 28 years.”

In his 2008 autobiography titled “They Call Me a Terrorist”, Holck recounts the delivery of the arms during a flight that left from Bulgaria.

The court said the parties had three days to decide whether to lodge an appeal.

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