Английская Википедия:Estonian Financial Supervisory Authority

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Infobox government agency

The Estonian Financial Supervisory Authority (Шаблон:Lang-ee, FI) is the financial supervision and crisis resolution authority of Estonia, responsible for the regulation of financial markets, and has been Estonia's national competent authority within European Banking Supervision since 2014.[1] It is independent from government interference in its decision-making.[2][3] Finantsinspektsioon is financed by the supervision and procedure fees paid by the subjects of financial supervision.[4]

Controversy

In June 2006, Andres Kurgpõld was in charge when Andrey Kozlov warned him of a massive money laundering network involving two Estonian banks SEB Eesti Ühispank and Sampo Pank, corrupt FSB, and persons close to Vladimir Putin.[5][6][7][8] Raul Malmstein was Estonia's chief Financial Officer.[9][10][7][11] A very large amount of money had transited accounts with funds from the Nord Stream 1 project which to finance the building of a pipeline from Vyborg, Russia, to Lubmin near Greifswald, Germany.[12][13][14] According to Natalia Morar's 21 May 2007 article in The New Times, Alexander Bortnikov, who was an FSB deputy deputy director as head of its economic security department, and Vladimir Putin were money laundering through Nord Stream funds at both Raiffeisen Zentralbank (Raiffeisen Zentralbank Oesterreich AG) in Austria and Diskont Bank in Russia.[12][13][14]

See also

References

Шаблон:Reflist