Find out the name of the bank that your payee does business with. If it is not an international bank, then let the payee tell you the name of its Correspondent Bank. You will need such data as Code reference of the bank etc.
Go to their international bank or correspondent bank in your country--foreign exchange department or money transfer department. Most large international banks have branches in large countries: if not, they also have agent banks or correspondent banks. You take the funds: cash, travelers checks, money order or negotiable draft and supply them with these very important details:
1. Name of the payee.
2. Address, phone number and email address of the payee.
3. Specific instructions: Notify by phone/fax, email, mail etc, and pay to...the sum of...by order of ....
4. Most importantly: collect a receipt and make sure that they assign a tracking number.
Boaz.
If it is a one-shot transfer or if they do not have such sophisticated banking accounts or bank branches, use Western Union; they are simpler.
2006-07-26 03:30:35
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answer #1
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answered by Boaz 4
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You got to your branch and fill out a form. You'll need to know the bank account, bank routing number and SWIFT (Society for Worldwide International Financial Telecommunctions) code. The bank personnel can talk you through it. There is a fee involved (naturally).
2006-07-26 10:24:59
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answer #2
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answered by 4XTrader 5
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Go to Your bank to do it. Or any local bank.
Too many scams on the Internet to trust any.
AND IF ANYONE GIVES YOU A LINK HERE!
IT'S A SCAM!!!!!!
2006-07-26 10:20:01
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answer #3
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answered by space_man_stitch 6
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mmm
scam much?
2006-07-26 10:19:01
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answer #4
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answered by Mj 4
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