![]() Turkey has been on notice for some time amid a slew of allegations implicating Erdogan’s associates in drug trafficking, oil for gold and other illicit deals with the Maduro regime in Venezuela, among other criminal activities. A 2019 report by Europol and the European Monitoring Center for Drugs and Addiction (EMCDDA) noted that Turkish organized crime groups are increasingly setting up their own operations to transport cocaine directly from Latin America to Europe.Īt the same time, the US Department of the Treasury has designated seven sets of Turkey-based individuals since April 2019 for providing a range of financial and travel facilitation services to al-Qaeda, Islamic State and other terror networks. The 39-member watchdog did not specify what the issues were that thrust Turkey, along with Mali and Jordan, into the company of 22 other nations. The FATF said despite “some progress across all areas of concern,” Turkey had “serious issues.” Coming on top of ever-louder, anti-Western growls from the country’s authoritarian - and increasingly erratic - president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Turkey is beginning to look more like Iran than a valued NATO member. The move will further dent Turkey’s spotty image and likely further weaken the lira, which had already dipped to a fresh low today following a bigger than expected 2% rate cut by the central bank. ![]() ![]() The global financial watchdog known as the Financial Action Task Force, or FATF, announced today that Turkey has been added to its “grey list” of countries subject to heightened scrutiny over terrorist financing, money laundering and institutional corruption. ![]()
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