Latest: Corruption and Money Laundering.
Corrupt money hides in Dubai, officials turn blind eye – Eva Joly.
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Empty Lobby in Dubai Hotel. |
PARIS
(Thomson Reuters Foundation) – Money allegedly stolen by Russian
officials in a major scandal and funds looted from Afghanistan’s Kabul
Bank are sitting in Dubai but international authorities have failed to
hold the United Arab Emirates to account, a leading French politician
said this week.
Eva Joly, a former magistrate known for exposing high-level
political and business corruption in France, said officials should
demand that Dubai give back the money stolen in Russia’s Magnitsky case
and from Kabul Bank.
Sergei Magnitsky, a Russian lawyer who died in jail, had
been investigating an alleged large-scale theft by Russian officials
while Kabul Bank nearly collapsed over corruption in 2010.
Joly called on the Organisation of Economic Cooperation and
Development (OECD) to place the UAE on its black list of countries
failing to enforce money-laundering laws.
“This is a shame, and we cannot live with it,” said Joly, a
member of the European Parliament who was named to the anti-graft body
backed by the United Nations to monitor corruption in Afghanistan.
“I cannot understand why the OECD blacklist is empty. Kabul
Bank is the most important bank scandal ever, affecting 13 percent of
the GDP of the country… and half of it is in Dubai,” she said at a
roundtable discussion on the impact of the OECD’s Anti-Bribery
Convention.
“We have the account numbers and the names of the persons and the international community is sitting by,” Joly added.
UAE financial regulatory officials, contacted on Thursday,
did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Angel Gurria, OECD
secretary general, said at the roundtable event he would look into
better coordination of anti-bribery, tax evasion and money laundering
matters at the organisation.
An audit of Kabul Bank revealed $1 billion – deposited from
U.S. foreign assistance and to pay military and policy salaries – had
gone missing. Investigators alleged its owners were running it like a
personal piggy bank to fund lavish lifestyles.
A report
last month from the UN anti-graft body noted that the receivers have
recovered $172.9 million from the sale of Kabul Bank assets, but that
there has been no serious effort to get back about $900 million
laundered internationally.
In the Magnitsky case, Joly said international investigators
had told her a large chunk of the $230 million stolen was also is in
Dubai, which she said investigators call a “black hole in international
cooperation.”
Magnitsky was conducting a probe into alleged theft by
Russian officials involving at least 23 companies and linked to an
alleged $230 million tax fraud case. He was arrested and died in prison
in Russia in 2009, seven days before the expiration of the one-year term
during which he could be held without trial.
OECD SHORTCOMING
Drago Kos, incoming chair of the OECD’s Working Group on
Bribery and international commissioner of the UN’s anti-graft body in
Afghanistan, warned during the panel discussion on corruption that flows
of illicit money from Afghanistan could accelerate in 2014 depending on
the results of the national elections, and that authorities are not
taking full action to recover assets looted from Kabul Bank.
Kos said British experts helped the Afghan Attorney
General's Office write letters requesting legal assistance for their
recovery, including to the UAE. But the Attorney General’s office did
not send out the letters to all the countries involved and it shortened
some other letters.
For the UAE’s part, it did not forward the request to the
appropriate office and no proceedings were started. In the first quarter
of this year, the UAE ambassador to Afghanistan promised to personally
intervene.
“But we still did not see any practical movements in the
direction of seizure or confiscation of assets looted in Kabul Bank,”
Kos said.
Gurria acknowledged at the seminar that the OECD – which
hosts groups to support the international community’s work on social and
economic development included tax, corruption and financial crimes –
had failed to use its powers fully to coordinate activities in the area.
“This is a shortcoming,” Gurria said, adding it would be addressed.
As well as the Working Group on Bribery that implements the
OECD convention to criminalise bribery in international business, the
OECD houses the Financial Action Task Force where financial policymakers
set global standards for countering terrorist finance and money
laundering.
FATF conducts regular assessments of how well countries
comply with its recommendations, naming and shaming those who are
stalling.
It publishes a blacklist and in October 2014, it cited Iran
and North Korea as high risk and as not complying with FATF
recommendations. It also has a so-called grey list of countries that
have significant shortcomings in their anti-money laundering and
counter-terrorist finance regulatory and investigative systems – a list
that includes countries such as Afghanistan and Nigeria but not the UAE.
Money laundering and corruption investigators frequently point to Dubai as a major centre for the laundering of criminal funds.
Other branches of the OECD are working on sharing tax
information and reviewing the role that shell companies play in hiding
the true owner of assets obtained from crime and corruption. Nicola
Bonucci, OECD’s general counsel, said the organisation has “untapped
potential” for coordinating and strengthening international efforts in
the field of crime and corruption.
Joly gained fame for her work as a French magistrate,
exposing high-level corruption in the business empire of former minister
Bernard Tapie and Credit Lyonnaise, and in the leading French oil
company Elf Aquitaine.
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