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Major banks team up with police to combat special fraud

Major banks team up with police to combat special fraud

Japan Times4 days ago

Eight major banks have signed an agreement with the National Police Agency to share information on accounts with suspicious activity as part of an ongoing fight against special fraud schemes.
Mizuho Bank, MUFG Bank, Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp., Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Bank and four banks under Resona Holdings entered into the agreement on Wednesday. Earlier this year, Japan Post Bank and PayPay Bank also signed a similar deal.
In special fraud cases, perpetrators typically convince victims to raise their withdrawal limits and make repeated transactions to transfer out large sums of money.
Banks have their own monitoring system that allows them to flag accounts with suspicious activity, such as inward or outward transfers involving unusually large sums.
Under the new agreement, the banks will share information on the accounts they have flagged to the NPA and prefectural police departments so they can take swift action. The police will warn individuals who appear to be victims of fraud while they make efforts to identify and apprehend the fraudsters involved in each of the cases.
In the past, banks first shared information on accounts flagged for suspicious activity with the Financial Services Agency, which then relayed it to the police. A direct collaboration between financial institutions and the police allows for a swifter response in countering special fraud schemes.
Regional banks were the first to enter into such agreements with the police, ahead of major banks.
So far, the effort appears to be bearing fruit: Nearly 70% of 1,866 accounts reported to the police for suspicious activity between January and May turned out to be those belonging to victims of fraud, according to Nikkei. Among those reported, 45 accounts were determined to have been used by fraud syndicates as well.
These developments come at a time when special fraud cases are becoming increasingly common in Japan.
According to the NPA, losses attributed to special fraud cases in 2024 amounted to ¥71.88 billion ($500 million), a record high. Cases included those in which scammers duped victims into paying large sums of money by posing as representatives of government agencies via phone calls or letters.
Fraud conducted through social media — including romance scams, in which swindlers prey on victims online by gaining their affection and trust before convincing them to transmit large sums of money — are also on the rise. Losses attributed to such cases totaled ¥127.19 billion last year.

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Japan, ROK Expected to Deepen Future-Oriented Cooperation; Nations on Equal Economic Footing, Share Common Challenges
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Japan, ROK Expected to Deepen Future-Oriented Cooperation; Nations on Equal Economic Footing, Share Common Challenges

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South Korea counts on shipbuilding to ease U.S. tariff woes
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China's 'panda diplomacy' in focus as zero moment may come in Japan
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China's relationship with the United States has been cooling in recent years, as Washington maintains a hard-line stance toward China, renewed by tariff-fueled trade salvos by President Donald Trump who returned to the White House in January. She also said Beijing's agreement with Tokyo in late May to begin procedures to resume importing Japanese marine products indicates that China is making visible efforts to improve the relationship, something that a new panda allocation would support. China imposed a ban on Japanese seafood imports in August 2023 in opposition to the release of treated radioactive wastewater from the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant into the sea. The Asian neighbors have long been at loggerheads over historical and territorial issues, including a dispute over the Tokyo-controlled, Beijing-claimed Senkaku Islands in the East China Sea. China's increasing military activities in the Indo-Pacific region have only stoked tensions. China has long used the panda as a tool of diplomatic outreach and goodwill toward various nations, including the United States, Russia, Australia and South Korea among others. With an eye on fostering "an atmosphere of improving bilateral ties," China may announce a new panda loan, perhaps during the next meeting between Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba and Chinese Premier Li Qiang, Mifune speculated. Japan hopes to host a summit with China and South Korea later this year in Tokyo, and Ishiba-Li talks are expected to take place on the sidelines. During a China trip as leader of a business delegation in early June, Yohei Kono, the former Japanese House of Representatives speaker, met with Li and floated the idea of the high-ranking Chinese official bringing pandas with him to Japan. While calling on Japan to promote cooperation to address "challenges posed to the world," such as "U.S. tariff measures," Li told Kono he attaches "great importance" to the panda request as "an important proposal," according to a delegation member. However, on Sept. 3 China will mark 80 years since it declared victory in its 1937-1945 War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression, making diplomatic outreach in the approaching period challenging, Mifune said. Mifune also pointed out that China may be unwilling to send pandas to Adventure World in Shirahama during the tenure of the town's pro-Taiwan Mayor Yasuhiro Oe, who took office in May last year in a move that might have led to the four panda's repatriation ahead of schedule. Oe, a former House of Councillors member, has deep ties with Taiwan, with which the Japanese government only maintains unofficial relations. China sees the self-ruled democratic island as a breakaway province to be reunified with the mainland, by force if necessary. Adventure World has engaged in a collaborative project to breed the animal, now classified as "vulnerable" on the global list of at-risk species, with China since 1994. Masaki Ienaga, a professor at Tokyo Woman's Christian University, said that China has used pandas not as a tool to demand other nations "give ground" on bilateral issues, but as a signal that the attitude toward Beijing in the recipient nation is "right and friendly." "Even if China were to give Japan some pandas, it would not mean that Japan has to do a lot of things for it," but how the Japanese public reacts to the arrival of new pandas will matter to Beijing, he said. Ienaga is also skeptical that a new panda loan will have any tangible impact on the Japanese government's diplomatic posture toward China or Japanese public opinion about its neighbor. "Japanese society no longer really looks at pandas through a political lens," as opposed to in 1972 when the animals were accepted "genuinely as a symbol of friendship," Ienaga added. By Keita Nakamura

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