There are no comments.
The head of Taiwan’s top financial regulator resigned yesterday after US authorities fined a local bank linked to the so-called Panama Papers scandal.
Ding Kung-wha, chairman of the Financial Supervisory Commission (FSC), had been criticised over his handling of the controversy involving Mega International Commercial Bank, which was hit with a $180mn fine in the US in August.
American regulators accused the bank of showing “flagrant disregard” for anti-money laundering laws, saying they had identified “suspicious transactions” between the bank’s New York and Panama Branches.
The Panama Papers, which were released by media in April, comprised a trove of leaked documents that revealed a murky financial underworld of tax evasion by politicians, celebrities, and sports stars using shell companies. Mega Bank had dealings with a Panamanian law firm at the centre of the scandal, the US Department of Financial Services said.
The US order does not specify whether the Taiwanese bank actually engaged in money laundering.
Some lawmakers criticised Ding for being slow in handling Mega and another case in which a local entertainment company was accused of insider trading and market manipulation. The firm is now under investigation.
“I resigned to maintain my innocence and hope that it will end the harm for the FSC,” Ding said in a statement, adding that the FSC had launched a probe into the Mega case at the earliest possible time. Ding was appointed by Premier Lin Chuan in May and is the first cabinet minister to leave office under the new government.
The FSC hit Mega Bank with a Tw$10mn ($316,000) fine last month and demanded the bank fire six people, including its legal representative and former chairman McKinney Tsai.
There are no comments.
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