LONDON (AP) A British bank could soon be cutting a financial lifeline for millions of Somalis.
Barclays is poised to sever its ties to Dahabshiil, one of the Somali expatriate community's biggest money transfer services, as part of a larger reorganization of its business. Barring a successful last-minute court challenge, experts say the move will jeopardize 100 million pounds ($160 million) worth of payments made from the U.K. each year.
Barclays' move, part of an industry-wide effort to insulate banks from the risks associated with money-laundering and corruption, could force Dahabshiil to stop executing transfers between individuals within days. A court ruling had been expected Tuesday but was delayed because arguments ran late, the company said.
Barclays did not comment ahead of the court's ruling, but it and other British banks have been cutting high-risk clients after a slew of scandals involving money laundering and corruption.
Somalia is a terrorism hotspot that has not had a functional government in two decades, and the flow of expatriate money to the troubled East African nation has repeatedly come under law enforcement scrutiny on both sides of the Atlantic.