• About Us
  • The Team
  • Newsletter
  • Advertise with Us
GGRAsia
  • Home
  • Macau
  • Philippines
  • Singapore
  • Japan
  • Rest of Asia
  • World
  • Industry Talk
  • Trends & Tech
  • CSR
Reading: AML checks of S.Korea casinos restart after pandemic pause
Ad image
  • About Us
  • The Team
  • Newsletter
  • Advertise with Us
GGRAsia
  • Home
  • Macau
  • Philippines
  • Singapore
  • Japan
  • Rest of Asia
  • World
  • Industry Talk
  • Trends & Tech
  • CSR
Reading: AML checks of S.Korea casinos restart after pandemic pause
Ad image
Search
  • Home
  • Macau
  • Philippines
  • Singapore
  • Japan
  • Rest of Asia
  • World
  • Industry Talk
  • Trends & Tech
  • CSR
GGRAsia > Newsletter > Newsletter 4 > AML checks of S.Korea casinos restart after pandemic pause
Latest NewsNewsletterNewsletter 4Rest of AsiaTop of the deck

AML checks of S.Korea casinos restart after pandemic pause

Newsdesk Published January 19, 2022
Share
2 Min Read

The Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU), a body under South Korea’s Financial Services Commission, is to resume inspection of the anti-money laundering (AML) compliance of nine casino venues on the country’s mainland, after “a temporary halt… due to pandemic-induced business closures”.

The pause had started in 2020, according to an FIU representative spoken to by GGRAsia.

The inspection process covers Kangwon Land Inc, operator of the only casino in that nation allowed to offer bets to locals; and eight foreigner-only casino businesses.

Between 2018 and June 2021, Kangwon Land flagged 2,444 suspicious transactions to the FIU, the latter confirmed.

According to the FIU representative contacted by GGRAsia, the decision to resume AML inspection across the South Korean peninsula, was because of some improvement in casino-sector business recently.

The FIU spokesperson added, the maximum fine per AML violation by any entity was KRW100 million (US$84,000). Any entity found in violation could also risk the dismissal of the board member responsible for AML at the time of the infraction. The decision on whether to disclose publicly FIU inspection results involving violations, would be “dependent on each case”.

The inspection does not cover eight foreigner-only venues on Jeju island, a semi-autonomous region with its own regulatory system for the casino sector. The local government still needs to report the results of its own AML inspections – instituted from March 2019 – to the FIU, the latter said.

A spokesman for the Jeju government told GGRAsia the authority was still planning its AML inspection schedule for 2022.

Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Whatsapp Whatsapp LinkedIn Email Copy Link Print

Latest News

Zitro sees strong early momentum in Asia for FANTASY cabinet: Bill Stefanakis
June 5, 2026
Okada Manila vows to step up focus on Japanese visitor market
June 5, 2026
Philippines 1Q data shows onshore licensed online gaming revenue gaining share: Blask
June 5, 2026

Most Popular

HeadlinesJapanLatest NewsMacauNewsletterNewsletter 2

Potential MGM Resorts buyout could trigger review of Macau, Japan assets: analysts

June 3, 2026
HeadlinesLatest NewsMacauNewsletterNewsletter 2

Macau’s May GGR above expectations but negatively impacted by low hold: Seaport

June 2, 2026
HeadlinesLatest NewsMacauNewsletterNewsletter 4

Macau casino GGR grows 7pct y-o-y in May, to US$2.8bln: govt

June 1, 2026
HeadlinesLatest NewsNewsletterNewsletter 4Philippines

DigiPlus clinches subscription to US$200mln in International Ent’s convertible notes

June 3, 2026

Code of Ethics

Privacy Policy

Useful Links

Contact Us

Follow US
Copyright 2026 TEAM Publishing and Consultancy Ltd / All rights reserved
Sign up to our FREE Newsletter

Subscribe now and never miss our latest news!

Zero spam, unsubscribe at any time.