The Financial Action Task Force (FATF), a global anti-money laundering watchdog, has released a report on the ways extreme right-wing groups are financed, which includes a section on cryptocurrency.
The FATFâs report, titled âEthnically or Racially Motivated Terrorism Financing,â points out that virtual assets like bitcoin have been used by extremists who have been gradually shut out of traditional payment platforms, in the same way extreme right wing (ERW) groups have been blocked from social media.
The report highlights that some ERW groups have switched to âso called âprivacy coins,â i.e. VAs [virtual assets] that allow a user to maintain total anonymity when making blockchain transactions.â
Itâs worth noting that the blockchains underpinning virtual assets, even end-to-end encrypted varieties, leave some form of record of transactions â as opposed to cash, the preferred medium of exchange for criminals and terrorists.
âThere has been plenty of interest in VAs from different ERW groups and individuals looking for anonymity, especially after being removed from mainstream payment platforms,â the report states, adding:
âERW actors that feel more security-conscious and desire a greater level of secrecy, often choose VAs. However, notably there is limited information on the volume of funds being transferred in this way.Â
The FATF report goes on to list examples, such as one far-right organization in South Africa that created its own stablecoin that operates on a 1:1 ratio with the South African rand (ZAR).Â
âThe stablecoin, managed by an application styled PayApp, enables the group to use digital money as cash,â said the FATF report. âThe transactional data lasts 24 hours and thereafter is untraceable.â
FATF said bank statement analysis on the South African extremist group showed that the organization raised ZAR 268,000 ($17,469) in funds.
Other examples included Scandinavian ERW group Nordisk Styrke, which only gives cryptocurrency addresses on the organizationâs donations page.
A financial investigation into the terror attack perpetrated by the Christchurch mosque shooter in New Zealand in March 2019 found that he had made use of virtual assets to transfer funds, the FATF report said.
Read the full report: