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Corrupt Angola debt deal exposes EU tax havens

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Published 24 April 2013

A newly published report on a corrupt deal for the repayment of the Angola debt to Russia in the early 1990s was presented in the European Parliament yesterday (23 April) as a vivid example of the plundering that can take place in developing nations with the complicity of European banks and tax havens.

Portuguese MEP Ana Gomes (Socialists and Democrats) and the Open Society Foundation hosted the public event where the report - “Deception in high places: the corrupt Angola-Russia debt deal” - was presented.

The report is authored by Andrew Feinstein, a former member of the South African parliament and current director of Corruption Watch UK. Gomes praised Feinstein for producing the report despite potential legal challenges, and said that his Angolan partners took “serious personal risk”.

The report provides a detailed account of the web of financial transactions involving Angola’s $5-billion debt to Russia which evolved into the diversion of hundreds of millions of dollars of public funds to middlemen and senior government officials.

Millions of dollars were transferred through banks based in Switzerland, Luxembourg, Cyprus, the Netherlands, the British Virgin Islands and the Isle of Man to the benefit of powerful Angolan and Russian figures, the report shows.

President of Angola gets the cash

As Feinstein explained, it had been much easier to trace the Angolan officials who benefitted from the criminal transaction.

The biggest alleged beneficiary is José Eduardo dos Santos, who has been the Angolan president since 1979. Documents show that Dos Santos received $36.25 million from the diverted funds and four other Angolan officials named in the paper took between $3.35 million and $13.25 million.

The deal was intended to clear the debt owed to Russia for support provided by the Soviet Union during Angola’s 1975-1990 civil war. In 1996 Russia decided that Angola would not be able to repay the entire $5 billion debt, agreeing to accept $1.5 billion instead.

While it is not uncommon for a creditor to engage a financially reputable middleman to collect debts, the report says that in this case the intermediary chosen was a company specially set up for the occasion, Abalone Investments, with no assets and registered on the Isle of Man.

Abalone was owned by two businessmen with a history of making money in shady deals with Angola: Arcadi Gaydamak and Pierre Falcone. They opened an escrow account at the Swiss bank SBS, which later became UBS, Switzerland’s largest bank.

In Feinstein’s words, UBS seemed to execute the transfers from Abalone’s account without subjecting them to any meaningful internal review, or without referring them to the authorities, despite the potential illicit risks involved.

In the first phase of the operation, between October 1997 and July 2000, Angola transferred $774 million to Abalone’s UBS accounts. Of that money, Gaydamak received $138 million and Falcone $124 million. UBS used this account to pay Angolan official José Leitão da Costa $3.35 million.

“This raises the question why UBS didn’t flag or report this obviously suspicious payment,” Feinstein said.

Cypriot account named after Russian bank

Even though Abalone took no risk with the operation, the Russian side accepted far less of the agreed debt, leaving more money in the hands of the middlemen, the report says. On one occasion, Russia asked that Angola pay its debts directly to the Russian bank Sberinvest. So Gaydamak opened an account in Cyprus to which he gave the name “Sberinvest” and the Angolan money went there, even without the knowledge of Falcone.

Angolan officials transferred $618 million to the Sberinvest Cyprus account, believing they were paying the Russians. Together with the earlier transfers of funds to the Abalone UBS account, these amounts should have erased Angola’s debts.

But that didn’t happen, Feinstein claims, because significant amounts remained with the middlemen, the Angolan beneficiaries and others who are not yet identified.

Both Angola and Russia lost from the operations. In the second phase of the debt repayment operation, Abalone was paying Moscow with Russian debt instruments at their face value, even though their market value was ten times lower than face value.

“The central point is that a number of individuals, some of which have not yet been identified, made vast profits at the expense of the people of Angola and Russia,” Feinstein said.

He added that it was thanks to the facilitating role of banks, tax havens and the veil provided by front companies that national resources were stolen from the poorest citizens with impunity.

The author makes a series of recommendations to Angola, to Switzerland, to the EU and its member states, and to the financial sector to initiate investigations and take legal measures to prevent further wrongdoing. In particular, he advocated that the EU’s accounting directive, which will require reporting of payments to governments in the extractive and forestry sector, be extended to include the banking sector.

Gomes said she would send a copy of the report to EU foreign affairs chief Catherine Ashton, and another one to Commission President José Manuel Barroso.

Positions: 

Adriano Parreira, former ambassador of Angola to the UN in Geneva, said the victims of the  Angola-Russia debt deal were the Angolans. He said Angolans were impoverished by their “government of criminals”.

Parreira said that corrupt Angolan officials were “buying” the EU, giving as an example various acquisitions of Portuguese media and communications firms by rich Angolans. He said that such investment should be treated as theft and accused the Portuguese government of allowing the sale of state assets without providing full disclosure on the investors.

Georgi Gotev

COMMENTS

  • All of this swindling requires that "money" be of the "fictitious" type; that is rather than representing REAL value capital, it is of the fictitious capital" variety.

    Unfortunately as long as the 99% can be bamboozled into accepting worthless paper as "legal tender for all debts, public and private" the fraud will continue.

    The simple solution is to understand
    (1) what real economists from Aristotle onward had to say about how such fake paper leads naturally to wholesale fraudulence.
    (2) REAL "Money" is a commodity like any other
    (3)If it is paper or digital it must be backed by REAL specified value held "in trust" by the issuer and in favour of the bearer.
    (4) While precious metals are convenient in that they are durable, measurable, and have high value to mass ratios they are NOT the only 'commodities" usable as "money". Any core commodity with utility other than as money can be and in past has variously been so used.
    (5) As all real value is the product of natural gifts plus human labour ofthe CURRENT time the REAL values will vary one to another over time as the amounts of the labour vary. Attempts to fix" by law such ratios have ALWAYS failed. I.e. USA gold/silver - 16/1.
    (6) Daily (hourly) PRICES vary with immediate supply/demand factors. Keep the Banksters and other crooks out of the picture, and this is self regulating; suppliers appear or vanish as the ratio dictates.

    By :
    david tarbuck
    - Posted on :
    24/04/2013
  • Although the US and some European countries denounced the Portuguese colonisation, Angola food resources in 1973 was very high and there weren't any citizens dying of hunger, today there is a lot of people under these circunstances, in spite of Angola mineral and agricultural resources. The United States interest in oil and other mineral resources, such as diamonds, is explained by the protection given by the Angolan Governement to US fields : Cuban soldiers, although the political relationship between US and Cuba was what it was, were protecting these interests. But there is a lot to be said and if you want to know more, read the book - All in the Family ...The Corruption of the Political and Judiciary powers of Portugal and of the European Human Rights Commission and Court

    By :
    Vasco de Castro
    - Posted on :
    25/04/2013
Background: 

The EU has been under pressure to approve a transparency laws covering foreign mining and petroleum operations of EU-registered companies following the adoption of similar rules in Washington.

The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act became law in the United States in 2010. It included two provisions that affect corporations involved in mining and petroleum drilling overseas, which regulators adopted on 22 August 2012:

  • Section 1502 supports international efforts to prevent guerrilla fighters or renegade state forces in Great Lakes region of Africa from profiting off the sale of mined raw materials.
  • Section 1504 – known as the Cardin-Lugar rule – imposes disclosure standards on US-registered companies engaged in overseas mining and petroleum operations.

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