Zelensky backs down, Art-loving launderers & Tracking Jho Low
Some terms – such as “virtue signalling” – are irritating and illuminating in equal measure. The insult “grant eater”, which is widely used in the former Soviet Union, is one of them. It is used to describe non-governmental organisations that rely on funding from abroad, specifically from Western countries, and bluntly suggests that they serve foreign interests rather than the local causes that they purport to represent.
This does happen. I have known several NGOs whose primary focus is on Western donors, Western conferences, and publicising themselves to Western audiences. But there’s also a reason why Western-funded organisations are good, in that they allow campaigns for transparency, integrity and democracy to survive in countries where the kind of people rich enough to fund an NGO want the opposite of those things.
Ukraine’s anti-corruption NGOs are regularly accused of being grant eaters by their opponents, but I am delighted that this does not deter them. Nor has it deterred Westerners from supporting Ukrainian calls for the government in Kyiv to backtrack on its foolish, self-defeating and ill-designed legislation to scrap the independence of anti-corruption agencies.
Now that President Volodymyr Zelensky has bowed to this pressure, it is important that Westerners maintain it until he has restored what he removed, and that they keep funding the organisations fighting for an honest future for Ukrainians. Since 2014, Ukrainians have insisted that they are fighting a war on two fronts: one in the East against Russia; and one at home, against corrupt oligarchs. These two fronts cannot be fought in isolation.
“Freedom of speech and pluralism are essential in democracies. Ukraine’s authorities should not engage in nor tolerate retaliation against civic activists who expose alleged corruption and abuses of power,” said Human Rights Watch.
This also applies to Georgia, where the government has been imposing Russia-style restrictions on foreign funding for NGOs, much to the concern of European institutions.
CAN CONGRESS CLEAN UP THE ART MARKET?
Considering the White House’s crypto policies amount to the US basically throwing open the doors of the financial system to criminals, crooks and kleptocrats, it seems weird to be pleased about a proposal to partially close one small side-window. But still it’s important to focus on positive news when/if it turns up, so let’s do that.
Six senators, including long-term anti-corruption champion Sheldon Whitehouse, have tabled a bill extending anti-money-laundering provisions to the vast and under-regulated art market.
“Art should be for art-lovers, not terrorists and criminals,” said Senator John Fetterman. “For too long, loopholes have allowed Russian criminal kingpins to evade sanctions and terrorists like Hezbollah to funnel money through art deals. I’m grateful to Senators Grassley, Whitehouse, McCormick, Kim, and Cassidy for working across the aisle to require art dealers and auction houses to perform basic due diligence.”
Art, antiquities, and other valuable objects are pretty perfectly designed for money laundering. Their value is negotiable, they are easy to transport, can be bought for cash, and change hands in opaque deals brokered by intermediaries skilled in concealing the identities of everyone involved. “For those looking to launder money,” as this article notes, “it’s difficult to conjure up a more attractive set of circumstances than those.” This is why the Financial Action Task Force has repeatedly warned that the art market, which is worth around $65 billion globally each year, needs better controls.
The European Union’s fifth anti-money-laundering directive (5AMLD) five years ago imposed obligations for everyone involved in buying and selling art to check their customers’ identities, and the origins of their wealth, which brought the British art market – one of the world’s big three, along with China and the United States – under a modicum of control.
Last year, the US Treasury raised concern that the art market was “susceptible to abuse”, and now the proposed Art Market Integrity Act will hopefully bring the United States into line with other Western countries.
“This important legislation will help the United States go after Russian oligarchs using art to launder money and aid Russia’s invasion of Ukraine,” said Mykola Murskyj, Director of Razom Advocacy. “Ukrainian authorities have identified over $1.3 billion worth of art pieces being used by Russian oligarchs to evade U.S. sanctions. The time is right for Congress to crack down,”
MEME COIN BOUNTY HUNTERS
Speaking of cracking down. Congress could do with looking into crypto’s influence on the White House. If there is anyone who thinks I’m being a bit alarmist about the crypto industry’s heavy petting with the U.S. administration, I suggest reading this briefing about how terrorists are using cryptocurrencies to raise funds. On page five, there’s an example of Hamas raising funds in Tether’s USDT on the TRON blockchain in February this year. We know about this thanks to a confiscation request from U.S. authorities, but it wasn’t that long ago when law enforcement agencies would be investigating not just the transaction, but the companies behind it.
On the contrary, Tether’s CEO Paolo Ardoino was in the White House to witness Donald Trump signing the Genius act into law earlier this month, while Justin Sun – founder of TRON – is a major investor in Trump’s own crypto company World Liberty Financial, and has just rung the bell for TRON to start trading on the Nasdaq.
It is head spinning how fast this is all moving.
And finally, if you haven’t yet read Project Brazen’s spectacular piece of investigative journalism in which they tracked down the fugitive financier Jho Low to an exclusive neighbourhood in Shanghai, then you really should. Brazen co-founders Tom Wright and Bradley Hope have been tracking Jho Low for years, but what’s particularly cool about this latest iteration of their investigation is how they did it: with the $JHOLOW meme coin.
“Our unconventional twist is that if a tipster sends us something truly new about Jho – whether a never-before-published picture, a document, a recording, a video, a really tangible lead – - they will be paid a ‘bounty’ in $JHOLOW meme coins,” they wrote back in March. Since the coins could be converted into real money, this was a genuine bounty, and it helped bring in new information.
Meme coins are weird things, gaining or losing value from odd shifts in fashion, culture or online discourse, and there is something extremely exciting about the prospect of mobilising that strange quality for tracking down crooks rather than enabling or enriching them.
“A provocative goal of the experiment is to attract Jho Low’s own attention. By turning his story into a live financial game, $JHOLOW might compel Low to engage, even if covertly,” Hope wrote, in his white paper launching the project. “The exploration of investigative meme coins like $JHOLOW prompts a fundamental question: can we redeem the act of speculation by yoking it to the public good of truth-seeking? The jury is still out, but the possibility is tantalising.”
A version of this story was published in this week’s Oligarchy newsletter. Sign up here.
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