Estonia orders Danske Bank branch to shut
- Published
Estonia has told Danske Bank to close its branch in Tallinn before the end of 2019 after a money-laundering scandal.
Chief executive Thomas Borgen resigned last year after an investigation into payments of about €200bn (£174bn) which were made through the branch.
The bank said many of those payments were suspicious.
Interim chief executive Jesper Nielsen said the bank would comply and would also close most of its activities in Latvia, Lithuania and Russia.
However, its shared services centre in Lithuania will stay open.
"We acknowledge that the serious case of possible money-laundering in Estonia has had a negative impact on Estonian society and finds it best that Danske Bank discontinues its Estonian banking activities," Mr Nielsen said in a statement.
The Danske Bank branch must close within eight months and repay its clients their deposits.
Kilvar Kessler, head of Estonia's banking regulator Finantsinspektsioon, said: "We have every right to put an end, once and for all, to this, as large-scale violations of the local rules have been committed, and this has dealt a serious blow to the reputation of the Estonian financial market."
The incident has led the European Banking Authority to open an investigation into possible breaches of EU law by the financial authorities of Estonia and Denmark.
- Published19 September 2018