We acknowledge the significance of your online privacy and acknowledge that granting us permission to collect some personal information requires a great deal of trust. We seek this consent as it enables Distinct Post to offer a platform that amplifies the voices of the marginalized. By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Distinct PostDistinct Post
Aa
  • Home
  • Israel-Gaza Conflict
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Style
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Business
  • Royals
Reading: Turkey prepares to tighten crypto laws to remove itself from the ‘grey list’ of countries
Share
Aa
Distinct PostDistinct Post
  • Home
  • Israel-Gaza Conflict
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Style
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Business
  • Royals
Search
  • Home
  • Israel-Gaza Conflict
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Style
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Business
  • Royals
Follow US
Distinct Post > World > Middle East > Turkey prepares to tighten crypto laws to remove itself from the ‘grey list’ of countries
turkey-prepares-to-tighten-crypto-laws-to-remove-itself-from-the-grey-list-of-countries
Middle EastTech

Turkey prepares to tighten crypto laws to remove itself from the ‘grey list’ of countries

Jake Miller Published November 1, 2023
SHARE

Turkey is preparing new legislation covering crypto assets to persuade an international crime watchdog to remove it from a “grey list” of countries that have taken insufficient action to prevent money laundering and terrorist financing.

The Financial Action Task Force (FATF) downgraded Turkey to a so-called grey list in 2021. Addressing a parliamentary commission late on Tuesday, Finance Minister Mehmet Simsek said a FATF report found Turkey fully compliant with all but one of the watchdog’s 40 standards.

“The only remaining issue within the scope of technical compliance is the work related to crypto assets,” Simsek said.

“We will submit a law proposal on crypto-assets to the parliament as soon as possible. After that, there will be no reason for Turkey to stay in that grey list, if there are no other political considerations.”

Simsek gave no further details of the planned legal changes.

The FATF, set up by the G7 group of advanced economies to protect the global financial system, had warned Turkey about “serious shortcomings” including the need to improve measures to freeze assets linked to terrorism and weapons of mass destruction proliferation in 2019.

You Might Also Like

Canva Launches New Creative Operating System to Redefine Design and Collaboration

AI Revolution in Game Development Sparks Creativity and Concern Among Developers

Scientists Discover Mind-Blowing Trick to Unlock Forgotten Childhood Memories Using ‘Body Illusion’

Researchers Unveil PicoRing: A Wearable Computer Mouse That Lasts Over a Month on a Single Charge

TikTok Deletes Over 189 Million Videos in Q2 2025 to Strengthen Safety and Transparency

Jake Miller November 1, 2023 November 1, 2023
Popular News
Entertainment

Netflix’s Must-Watch K-Dramas: 5 Gripping Revenge Tales That Will Keep You Hooked

Alicia Brian Alicia Brian October 13, 2023
Australian bowlers heap praise on Pakistan’s batter Babar Azam ahead of Test series
Blake Lively Drags Scooter Braun Into Legal Feud as Fallout With Taylor Swift Deepens
Cristiano Ronaldo’s future with Portugal in hang after Euro 2024 exit
Bangladesh quota protesters call for complete shutdown amid deadly clashes

Categories

  • Market
  • Tech
  • Fitness
  • Food
  • Celebrity
  • Fashion
  • Beauty
  • Football
  • Cricket
  • Entertainment
    • Celebrity
    • Movies
    • Television
  • Style
    • Arts
    • Beauty
    • Fashion
  • Health
    • Fitness
    • Food
  • Sports
    • Baseball
    • Basketball
    • Cricket
    • Football
    • Olympics
  • Business
    • Market
    • Tech
Useful Links
  • About us
  • Privacy policy
  • Term Of Use

2023 © Distinct Post News & Media. All Rights Reserved.

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?