Friday, January 20, 2012

WORLD_ Investigation into seized assets of Hosni Mubarak and Zine el Abidine Ben Ali begins

Investigation into seized assets of Hosni Mubarak and Zine el Abidine Ben Ali begins

An investigation to seize vast assets of deposed strongmen Hosni Mubarak of Egypt and Zine el Abidine Ben Ali of Tunisia has been launched in Europe and North America, a Eurojust spokesman said Thursday.


Zine el Abidine Ben Ali, left, and Hosni Mubarak Photo: AP/EPA

The Telegraph
9:54PM GMT 15 Dec 2011

Joannes Thuy, a EuroJust spokesman said the investigation started after a meeting on Monday and Tuesday between Eurojust, the European Union's justice co-ordination body, and Tunisian and Egyptian authorities in The Hague, where Eurojust is based.

"Both Tunisia and Egypt explained the ex-presidents illegally transferred a lot of money out of their countries and invested in bank accounts and property all over Europe, even Canada and the United States," Thuy said.

"They asked us to coordinate the investigation, which we are now facilitating and have put them in touch with various prosecutors in different countries," he added.

"Following a joint decision, a Europe-wide financial investigation was launched to identify assets, freeze bank accounts and confiscate money and properties," Eurojust added in a press release.

Mr Thuy could not say whether any assets have yet been recovered but added it was believed to be running "into millions and millions" of euros.


Related Articles

_ Egypt: eight dead in Cairo street battles - 17 Dec 2011
_ Egypt: eight dead in Cairo street battles - 17 Dec 2011
_ Switzerland to freeze Mubarak's assets - 11 Feb 2011
_ Swiss lawyer seeks freeze on any Ben Ali assets - 18 Jan 2011


Mubarak is currently facing a murder trial before an Egyptian court and may get the death sentence if found complicit in the killings of some 850 people who died during 18 days of protest that ousted him from power in February.

Ben Ali and his wife were forced into exile in Saudi Arabia earlier during the "Arab Spring" revolt when he was overthrown in an unprecedented popular uprising.

But earlier this month, liquidators of Ben Ali's vast business empire threatened to quit en masse over security concerns, the official TAP news agency reported from Tunis.

Some 200-odd liquidators tasked with managing a myriad of firms owned by Ben Ali and his entourage said they would walk out be year's end if attacks, both verbally and physically, did not stop.



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