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Wednesday, February 20, 2019

Money Laundering:Madrid’s Chinese residents march against crippling bank account freeze

Madrid’s Chinese residents march against crippling bank account freeze

In the largest turnout for this community, around a thousand people protested what they see as racist policies that target them unfairly as part of lenders’ crackdown on money laundering

Chinese nationals protesting in Madrid on Friday.  VÍDEO: ATLAS
Madrid 
Spanish Civil Guard policemen stand guard outside China's ICBC bank offices, in Madrid, Spain, Wednesday, Feb. 17, 2016. Spanish police searched offices of China's ICBC bank in downtown Madrid and arrested five people Wednesday as part of a money laundering and tax fraud probe. (AP Photo/Francisco Seco)Related imageImage result for money laundering Chinese spain
Around a thousand people of Chinese origin, according to police estimates, marched outside the BBVA Foundation in Madrid on Friday to protest a widespread freeze on their bank accounts.
The bank says it is complying with anti-money laundering legislation and denies any discrimination based on race, as the demonstrators claim.
Suddenly I am being treated like a criminal who launders money
ESTRELLA ZHENG, 75
Protesters waved signs with messages in Spanish and Chinese. “Surviving is not a crime. Stop racism!” read one. “I need to pay rent, food, school, I want my money,” read another. “I haven’t been able to take out money for months,” said a third.
The march was organized by a federation of 74 Chinese associations in Spain. Protesters blocked off all three lanes on one side of Paseo de Recoletos, outside the BBVA Foundation. The building was selected because of its central location, as the BBVA headquarters are currently located in the outskirts.
This marks the first major protest in Madrid by Chinese nationals. Associations say that the community has suffered problems in silence in the past, such as a wave of robberies at Chinese-run establishments. But this time, the damage and the anger are much greater.
Members of the Chinese Senior Center in Usera make signs for the protest.
Members of the Chinese Senior Center in Usera make signs for the protest. SAMUEL SÁNCHEZ
“We are a very calm people. For us to go out on the streets, it’s got to be a really big deal,” said Beini Qian, a 32-year-old volunteer who helped prepare the march. Members of the Chinese Senior Center in the neighborhood of Usera helped by handpainting the signs used in the protest.
The Chinese federation believes as many as 5,000 people could be affected. The banks began blocking accounts months ago, but the wave of new freezes last week, during the Chinese New Year, was especially painful to the community.
The demonstrators included students, business owners and employees who have been unable to access the money in their accounts for months. Huang Dufang, 33, who works in a cafeteria, cried as she told her story: she spent the saddest New Year ever, she said, cut off from her savings of just over €1,000 and with very little cash to tide her over. “I wanted to make a special meal with seafood, but they blocked my account.”
Estrella Zheng, a 75-year-old retiree, has dual citizenship and has spent more time in Madrid (32 years) than anywhere else. Her account at La Caixa was blocked without any prior warning. “I have worked for nearly every ministry and courthouse... and suddenly I am being treated like a criminal who launders money,” she said.
Protesters said that some of the most dramatic cases involve students whose families do not live here and cannot help them out. Hui Yu, a 20-year-old law student at Complutense University, says his friends pooled their resources and got him €100. “I am living on the bare minimum,” he says.

Asset freeze

The trouble stems from the fact that in recent months BBVA and other lenders have frozen their bank accounts as part of their crackdown against money laundering. There has been a tide of affected individuals who have lost access to their deposits – some of them since 2018, and thousands more in the last week alone, according to Chinese associations.
These groups say they are being targeted because of their nationality, and that lenders are being slow about unblocking the accounts.
“We cannot pay the utility bills, the school bills,” says Enguan, a 51-year-old real estate agent who moved to Spain in 1990.
In Usera, the Madrid district with the largest Chinese community – 8,215 out of a total of 34,517 Chinese migrants in the city – some protest signs were in display in Chinese characters to attract attention from media in China, who have been covering the plight of their compatriots in Spain.
“This is the time to defend our rights,” said Beini. “We cannot allow them to keep trampling our rights.”

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