Deutsche Bank is under scrutiny over allegations employees in its Estonia branch facilitated money laundering of billions of dollars (RAIGO PAJULA)

Tallinn (AFP) – Estonia’s banking watchdog FSA said Tuesday it has ordered Denmark’s largest lender Danske Bank to close its local branch within eight months, following a money laundering scandal.

Investigators in Copenhagen, Brussels, London and the United States are probing some 200 billion euros ($226 billion) in transfers that passed through the Estonian branch between 2007 and 2015, involving some 15,000 foreign clients.

Last December, Estonian authorities detained 10 former Danske employees on suspicion they had facilitated money laundering via non-resident clients, including many Russians.

“We have every right to put an end once and for all to this very exceptional and unfortunate case,” FSA (Financial Supervision Authority) head Kilvar Kessler said in a statement Tuesday.

The FSA gave Danske 20 days to submit an action plan for closing the branch. 

On Monday, the European Banking Authority announced it was opening a formal investigation into a possible breach of EU laws by the FSA and its Danish counterpart Finanstilsynet over the case.

Kessler said the scandal had “dealt a serious blow to the transparency, credibility and reputation of the Estonian financial market, while the supervisory authority of the home country has handled the bank softly.”

Last November, Danish prosecutors brought preliminary charges against Danske for violating money-laundering laws between February 2007 and January 2016.

Danske has acknowledged that much of the money that went through the branch during that period may need to be treated as suspicious in origin.

At the end of 2018, the Estonian branch had around 14,700 depositors in Estonia and 12,300 borrowers.

Estonia’s central bank said Tuesday the shutdown would have little effect on the Estonian economy as Danske had stopped providing services to private individuals in 2015.

In April 2018, Danske announced it had stopped opening new accounts for local businesses in the Baltic States.

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