MNA A member of the Expediency Council, the body in charge of deciding on FATF-related bills, said Wed. that the Palermo bill is no longer on the agenda of the Council.
Gholamreza Mesbahi Moghadam told Mehr correspondent on Wednesday that the one-year deadline for the Expediency Council to evaluate the Palermo bill against the countrys national interests has come to an end, and the issue is basically no longer on the Councils agenda.
The deadline for reviewing the CFT bill is not over yet, he added.
The Paris-based Financial Action Task Force (FATF), a global anti-money laundering body, has given Iran a final deadline of February 2020 to implement a set of four bill to meet the standards set by the watchdog.
Last October, Iran's Parliament passed the four bills, but only two of them have so far gone into effect.
The Expediency Council is in charge of deciding the fate of the two other bills, namely one on Irans accession to the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime, commonly known in Iran as Palermo, and the other one a bill amending Irans Combating the Financing of Terrorism (CFT) law.
With Iran under the most severe sanctions, accession to such conventions is an act of self-imposing sanctions, the EC member said, adding When the US is seeking to restrict Irans financial relations, it is not in the countrys best interest to make its dealings transparent to institutions such as FATF.
He also stressed that for Iran to be put on the FATFs blacklist after the Feb. deadline runs out, all member states must come to an agreement.