France Probes Riad Salameh's Wealth
France has opened a probe into the personal wealth of Riad Salameh, central bank chief in crisis-hit Lebanon, sources told AFP Sunday.
Paris financial prosecutors have opened a preliminary probe
into criminal association and money laundering by Salameh, a source close to
the investigation and a judicial source said, following a similar move by
Switzerland.
Its findings could shed light onto the origins of the
70-year-old former Merrill Lynch banker's wealth.
In post since 1993 and once hailed by political and business
leaders, Salameh has been repeatedly accused by the government of caretaker
Prime Minister Hassan Diab of being responsible for the collapse of the
Lebanese pound.
The Lebanese public suspect him and other high officials of
transferring money abroad during a 2019 uprising, when ordinary people were
prevented from doing so.
Lebanon has since been hit by an economic crisis which the
World Bank says is one of the worst anywhere since the 19th century.
Close to the powerful Hariri family, Salameh has been under
investigation for months in Switzerland on suspicion of serious money
laundering and embezzlement from the Bank of Lebanon.
He also owns several properties in France and may have
transferred money via the country.
One of the criminal complaints that prompted French
prosecutors to get involved came from Swiss foundation Accountability Now,
daily Le Monde reported.
Another was filed by anti-financial crime group Sherpa and
by the Collective of Victims of Fraudulent and Criminal Practices in Lebanon,
set up by savers devastated by the post-2019 crisis.
The French move signals the start of "a universal
mega-investigation across Europe", said William Bourdon and Amelie
Lefebvre, lawyers for Sherpa and the savers' collective.
"Enormous money laundering operations will be examined,
which ought to open every nook and cranny of the mafia that has brought Lebanon
to its knees," they hope.
Their criminal complaint, seen by AFP, accuses Salameh and
people close to him -- his brother Raja, his son Nadi, a nephew and an aide at
the central bank -- of fraudulently building a vast fortune in Europe.
The groups urge the judiciary to investigate massive capital
flight from Lebanon since the crisis began, as well as property purchases out
of all proportion to the buyers' income and the roles played by financial
intermediaries, tax havens and strawmen.
Based especially on reports by Lebanese website Daraj.com
and the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project, the plaintiffs
believe that Salameh's worldwide total wealth amounts to more than $2 billion.
He contests that figure, saying his holdings stem from
inheritances, his banking career and legitimate investments since taking office
in 1993.
The French prosecutors' investigation is the latest in a
string of probes into "ill-gotten gains" of foreign leaders -- especially
from Africa or the Middle East.
Comments
Post a Comment