JP Morgan Chase is closing the Vatican bank's account with an Italian
branch of the U.S. banking giant because of concerns about a lack of
transparency at the Holy See's financial institution, Italian
newspapers reported.
The move is a blow to the
Vatican's drive to have its bank included in Europe's "white list" of
states that comply with international standards against tax fraud and
money-laundering.
The bank, formally known as the
Institute for Works of Religion (IOR), enacted major reforms last year
in an attempt to get Europe's seal of approval and put behind it
scandals that have included accusations of money laundering and fraud.
Italy's leading financial daily Il Sole 24 Ore
reported at the weekend that JP Morgan Chase in Milan had told the IOR
of the closing of its account in a letter on Feb. 15.
The
letter said the IOR's account in Italy's business capital would
gradually be phased out starting on March 16 and closed on March 30.
In Milan, JP Morgan Chase declined to comment and the
Vatican also had no comment. It was not possible to contact IOR
officials because Monday was a holiday in the Vatican.
Il
Sole said JP Morgan Chase informed the IOR that the account was being
closed because the bank's Milan branch felt the IOR had failed to
provide sufficient information on money transfers.
The
financial newspaper, which gave the number of the IOR account, said
some 1.5 billion euros passed through it in about 18 months. It said
the account was a "sweeping facility," meaning that it was emptied out
at the end of each day with funds transferred to another IOR account in
Germany.
The closure move by JP Morgan Chase, which
was also reported by two leading general newspapers on Monday -
Corriere della Sera and La Stampa - was a further blow to the IOR,
whose image has been tarnished by a string of scandals.
In
September, 2010, Italian investigators froze 23 million euros ($33
million) in funds in two Italian banks after opening an investigation
into possible money-laundering.
The bank said it did
nothing wrong and was just transferring funds between its own accounts.
The money was released in June 2011 but Rome magistrates are
continuing their probe.
"VATILEAKS"
SCANDAL
The public image of the bank has also been
harmed by the so-called "Vatileaks" scandal, in which highly
sensitive documents, including letters to Pope Benedict, were published
in Italian media.
Some of the leaked documents
appear to show a conflict among top Vatican officials about just how
transparent the bank should be about dealings that took place before it
enacted its new laws.
The IOR, founded in 1942 by
Pope Pius XII, handles financial activities for the Vatican, for orders
of priests and nuns, and for other Roman Catholic religious
institutions.
Last year, the Vatican adapted internal
laws to comply with international standards on financial crime.
The 108-acre sovereign state surrounded by Rome now
complies with the rules of the Paris-based Financial Action Task Force
(FATF).
It also established an internal Financial
Information Authority (FIA) along the lines of other countries and has
committed to comply with international anti-money laundering standards
and liaise with the group and law enforcement agencies.
The IOR was entangled in the collapse 30 years ago of Banco
Ambrosiano, with its lurid allegations about money-laundering,
freemasons, mafiosi and the mysterious death of Ambrosiano chairman
Roberto Calvi - "God's banker".
The IOR then held a
small stake in the Ambrosiano, at the time Italy's largest private bank
and investigators alleged that it was partly responsible for the
Ambrosiano's fraudulent bankruptcy.
Several
investigations have failed to determine whether Calvi, who was found
hanging under Blackfriars Bridge near London's financial district,
killed himself or was murdered.
The IOR denied any
role in the Ambrosiano collapse but paid $250 million to creditors in
what it called a "goodwill gesture".
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