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RAFTS functions as an add-on ‘plug and play’ solution to the main TurboSWIFT interface. As an overlay, RAFTS monitors every incoming and outgoing forex transaction occurring over the SWIFT network. To do so, RAFTS uses the Bridgers List of words/patterns. The Bridgers List, issued and regularly updated by organisations in Australia, Canada, Europe, the UK, the US, the United Nations, and the World Bank, is a comprehensive listing of names and keywords that could spell trouble. For instance, it would contain words like Osama Bin Laden, Dawood Ibrahim, Al Qaeda, etc.
Dual protection: manual plus automatic screening
When RAFTS encounters any of these words in a message, it moves the message to a separate folder of suspect transactions, in queue for manual authorisation. This queue appears on the computer terminal of the AML officer of the bank, who may then allow the transaction to go ahead, or reject it and send it back to its creator.
Using RAFTS, an officer may also append patterns to the black-lists (the existence of this pattern means the transaction is to be stopped) and white-lists (the existence of this pattern indicates the transaction is to be allowed). Further, the officer may set the priority in which messages (such as letters of credit, advice of cheque, bank guarantee, etc) of various kinds are to be scanned, as well as define the message types to be scanned or passed without scanning. Essentially, while RAFTS enables a bank to adhere to the first cardinal rule to prevent money laundering—know your customer—it also necessitates a bank’s strict compliance with the second cardinal rule - know your employee—in appointing a completely trustworthy AML officer. And that, in turn, will go a long way in ensuring that funds are not misused, resulting in a safer world in the long run.
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