India tightens cryptocurrency regulations to combat money laundering and terrorist financing.
AI Summary2 min read
TL;DR
India's FIU enforces stricter crypto regulations, requiring exchanges to verify users with selfies, documents, and location data to combat money laundering and terrorist financing. High-risk customers face enhanced due diligence, and ICOs are banned.
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cryptocurrency regulationsmoney launderingterrorist financingIndia FIUuser verification
According to CoinDesk, India's Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU) has announced stricter identity verification measures for cryptocurrency exchanges to combat money laundering and terrorist financing. The new regulations require exchanges to verify users' authenticity and vital signs by requiring them to take dynamic blinking selfies, and to accurately record users' geographic coordinates, time, and IP address. In addition to providing a Permanent Account (PAN), exchanges must collect additional documents such as passports, driver's licenses, Aadhaar cards or voter ID cards, as well as mobile phone numbers and email addresses, which will be verified using One-Time Passwords (OTPs). User bank account ownership will be verified through the "small-amount inflow verification" method, while high-risk customers or those associated with tax havens, Financial Action Task Force (FATF) jurisdictions, potential exposure individuals, or non-profit organizations will be subject to enhanced due diligence every six months. Exchanges are prohibited from supporting ICOs and from using tools such as coin mixers to conceal transaction traces and make cryptocurrencies untraceable. All platforms must register with the FIU, report suspicious transactions, and retain user data for five years. The guide states that initial coin offerings (ICOs) and initial coin offerings (ICOs) lack a sound economic basis and pose “higher and more complex” risks of money laundering and terrorist financing.