The Vatican revealed that its enhanced procedures have enabled it to
flag more suspicious transactions in 2012 than it did in 2011.
“I’m not saying that everything is great and perfect, but that a lot of
progress has been made in the last two years,” said Rene Brülhart,
director of the Financial Information Authority, at the Vatican’s press
office.
“It’s important that we’re setting a system here to protect the Holy See,” he added.
The Vatican’s Financial Information Authority made the statistics public
at a May 22 press conference, where it made its first-ever annual
report available.
The report shows that in 2012 there were six reports of suspicious activity, versus one in 2011.
Brülhart said this proves that his department and its system, which became operational in April 2011, are working well.
The director explained that the six suspicious transactions involved
sums of money greater than 10,000 Euros ($13,000) but would not provide
additional details.
He also revealed that the Financial Authority asked the Promoter of
Justice’s office within the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith
to study two of the cases and said that they could be related to money
laundering.
He stressed that international cooperation to help combat money
laundering was “absolutely key and crucial” and that the Vatican is “a
key player in global fight of money laundering.”
The Financial Information Authority was set up to help combat money
laundering and the financing of terrorism and hired Brülhart as its
director just a few months ago.
According to the Swiss native, combating money laundering in the Vatican
began back in 2010 after Pope Benedict XVI released a “motu proprio”
that laid out the procedures.
“There’s no financial sector in the Vatican, no stock exchange, so it’s a completely different environment,” Brülhart said.
He noted that his office has two functions: to work as an intelligence
unit and to supervise the so-called Vatican bank, which is officially
called the Institute for Works of Religion.
The Vatican bank also recently received a new president, Ernst von
Freyberg, who announced May 13 that it will make its annual report
public and launch a website to better inform the public about its
mission.