Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi Saturday questioned the decision of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) to keep Pakistan on its "increased monitoring list" despite making considerable progress under the action plan given to the country by the financial watchdog.
Reacting to the task force's decision, the foreign minister said, "it is to be determined whether FATF is a political forum or a technical one and whether it is being used to achieve political objectives."
Qureshi said Pakistan has completed work on 26 points significant progress has been made on the 27th point. "In my view, in such a situation, there is no reason to keep Pakistan on the grey list," he added.
The foreign minister's statement came after FATF announced Friday that it was retaining Pakistan on the grey list after the plenary meeting was concluded as five days of talks came to an end in Paris.
Addressing a press conference after the meeting concluded, FATF President Dr. Marcus Pleyer said that Pakistan remains under "increased monitoring".
"The Pakistani government has made substantial progress in making its counter-terrorist financing systems stronger and more effective. It has largely addressed 26 out of 27 items on the action plan it first committed to in June 2018," Pleyer said.
In a statement issued, the FATF expressed satisfaction over Pakistan's progress and appreciated the high-level political commitment to work with global and regional anti-money laundering watchdogs. In a statement, FATF said:
"The FATF recognizes Pakistan's progress and efforts to address these CFT (counter financing of terrorism) action plan items and notes that since February 2021, Pakistan has made progress to complete two of the three remaining action items on demonstrating that effective, proportionate, and dissuasive sanctions are imposed for TF convictions and that Pakistan's targeted financial sanctions regime was being used effectively to targeted terrorist assets."
The anti-terror financing watchdog asked Pakistan to make progress on the one remaining point and urged authorities to take strict actions against "senior leaders and commanders of UN-designated terrorist groups."
The group asked Pakistan to work to address its strategically important Anti- Money Laundering (AML) and CFT deficiencies. It has asked Pakistan to: