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Regulation Name: The Anti-money Laundering, Combatting The Financing Of Terrorism And Countering Proliferation Financing (Miscellaneous Provisions) Bill (No. III of 2026)
Date Of Issue: 20 Apr 2026
Region: Mauritius
Agency: Mauritius National Assembly
Mauritius AML/CFT/CPF Bill 2026: A Comprehensive Breakdown for Compliance Leaders
Introduction: A Major AML Reform Aligned with FATF Standards
The Anti-Money Laundering, Combatting the Financing of Terrorism and Countering Proliferation Financing (Miscellaneous Provisions) Bill, 2026 represents a sweeping legislative reform aimed at strengthening Mauritius’ financial crime framework.
The Bill amends multiple core statutes to:
- Enhance detection and enforcement of financial crimes
- Strengthen institutional coordination
- Align with FATF Recommendations, especially around proliferation financing
- Close gaps in beneficial ownership, asset recovery, and supervision
At its core, the Bill reflects Mauritius’ commitment to global AML/CFT/CPF standards and effectiveness-driven compliance.
- Expansion of AML Scope: Inclusion of Proliferation Financing
One of the most critical upgrades is the systematic inclusion of proliferation financing (PF) across legislation.
Key Changes:
- AML/CFT frameworks are expanded to AML/CFT/CPF
- Financial institutions must now address:
- Money laundering
- Terrorism financing
- Proliferation financing risks
- PF risk is explicitly linked to UN sanctions evasion and FATF Recommendation 7
Compliance Impact:
- Firms must update:
- Risk assessments
- Transaction monitoring rules
- Sanctions screening frameworks
- PF risk can be managed within existing sanctions compliance programs
- Strengthened Beneficial Ownership (BO) Transparency
The Bill significantly tightens beneficial ownership identification and control frameworks.
Updated Definition:
A beneficial owner now includes:
- Natural persons with direct or indirect ownership
- Individuals exercising control through:
- Voting rights
- Management authority
- Debt instruments
- Other influence mechanisms
- Senior managing officials (fallback)
New Requirements:
- Co-operatives must maintain BO registers
- Registers must be:
- Accurate
- Up-to-date
- Accessible to competent authorities
Compliance Impact:
- Increased KYC/CDD complexity
- Enhanced expectations for:
- Ownership tracing across structures
- Identifying control without ownership
- Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU): New Enforcement Powers
The FIU gains significant operational authority, marking a shift toward proactive intelligence-led enforcement.
Key Powers Introduced:
Temporary Suspension of Suspicious Transactions
- FIU can freeze transactions for up to 72 hours (extendable)
- Triggered when:
- Further verification is required
- ML/TF/PF suspicion exists
Information Requests
- Reporting entities must provide additional data within:
- 24 hours (FIU requests)
- 48 hours (other provisions)
Non-Disclosure Obligations
- Strict prohibition on tipping-off regarding FIU orders
Compliance Impact:
- Real-time response capabilities required
- Need for automated case management + escalation workflows
- Centralised Information Management System (CIMS)
A major structural reform is the introduction of a Centralised AML/CFT/CPF Data System.
Features:
- National repository of:
- Suspicious transaction data
- Enforcement statistics
- Risk assessments
- Enables:
- Inter-agency coordination
- FATF reporting
- Advanced analytics
Compliance Impact:
- Increased data-sharing obligations
- Standardisation of reporting formats
- Higher scrutiny due to centralized intelligence
- Asset Recovery and “Property of Corresponding Value”
The Bill introduces a powerful concept: “property of corresponding value.”
What It Means:
Authorities can seize assets even if:
- Original criminal proceeds:
- Cannot be located
- Are concealed or transferred
- Are held abroad
Expanded Powers:
- Confiscation applies to:
- Lawful assets equivalent in value
- Third-party-held assets (non-bona fide)
Additional Measures:
- Mandatory declarations within 48 hours
- Stronger criminal attachment and confiscation regimes
Compliance Impact:
- Heightened asset tracing expectations
- Greater risk exposure for:
- Complex ownership structures
- Cross-border asset flows
- Enhanced Supervisory and Enforcement Powers
Central Bank & Regulators:
- Can impose administrative penalties and sanctions
- Must follow due process:
- Written notice
- 21-day representation period
Expanded Supervisory Scope:
- Applies to:
- Directors
- Employees
- Shareholders with significant interest
Information Sharing:
- Domestic and international regulators can:
- Share AML/CFT/CPF intelligence
- Exchange supervisory data
Compliance Impact:
- Increased personal liability for senior management
- Stronger emphasis on governance and accountability
- Faster Financial Crime Prosecution
The Bill introduces judicial efficiency reforms.
Key Measures:
- Financial Crimes Division must:
- Conduct trials expeditiously
- Avoid unnecessary delays
- Adjournments must be:
- Justified
- Documented
Compliance Impact:
- Faster enforcement cycles
- Reduced litigation delays
- Expanded Definition of Financial Institutions and Transactions
Financial Institutions Now Include:
- Virtual asset service providers (VASPs)
- Pension schemes
- Trust structures
- Credit unions
Broader Transaction Definition:
- Includes:
- Attempted transactions
- Business relationship initiation
- Digital interactions
Compliance Impact:
- Wider regulatory perimeter
- Increased onboarding and monitoring obligations
- National Risk Assessment (NRA) and Data-Driven Supervision
Enhancements:
- More frequent NRA updates
- Sectoral and ad-hoc risk assessments
- Mandatory publication of summary findings
Statistical Tracking:
Authorities must maintain data on:
- STRs
- Investigations and convictions
- Asset recovery outcomes
- International cooperation
Compliance Impact:
- Risk-based approach becomes data-intensive and dynamic
- Strengthened Inspection and Enforcement for Professionals
The Bill extends AML obligations to:
- Accountants
- Real estate agents
- Gambling operators
New Powers:
- On-site inspections
- Document seizure
- Mandatory compliance with directives
Penalties:
- Up to:
- 5 million rupees fines
- 10 years imprisonment
Compliance Impact:
- DNFBPs face bank-like AML scrutiny
- International Cooperation and Information Sharing
Key Enhancements:
- Authorities can:
- Share information spontaneously or on request
- Covers:
- Supervisory data
- AML intelligence
- Customer information
Safeguards:
- Use limited to intended purpose
- Requires prior authorization for onward sharing
Compliance Impact:
- Increased exposure to cross-border investigations
Conclusion: A Shift Toward Intelligence-Led AML Compliance
The Mauritius AML/CFT/CPF Bill 2026 is not a routine update—it is a system-wide transformation.
Strategic Takeaways for AML Leaders:
- Move from compliance-driven → intelligence-driven AML
- Integrate proliferation financing risk frameworks
- Invest in:
- Real-time monitoring
- Data infrastructure
- Beneficial ownership analytics
- Prepare for:
- Faster enforcement
- Deeper regulatory scrutiny
- Cross-border collaboration
This Bill firmly positions Mauritius within FATF-aligned, next-generation AML regimes, where data, speed, and transparency define compliance success.
Read about the bill here.
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