Anonymous ID: eaa86a Oct. 16, 2018, 7:15 p.m. No.3503681   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3714

Saudi Arabian corruption detainees may face terrorism-focused courts

 

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2018/04/08/saudi-arabian-corruption-detainees-may-face-terrorism-focused/

April 2018

 

 

Saudi Arabia’s public prosecutor has begun processing the cases of 56 men detained in the country’s sweeping anti-corruption purge late last year, an official said on Sunday.

 

The 56 are still in Saudi government custody after failing to be exonerated or reach financial settlements with the government.

 

The shock crackdown in November 2017 saw a new Supreme Anti-Corruption Committee round up 381 corruption suspects on Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s orders, with many confined and interrogated.

 

Just 30 or so of the men’s identities were released.

 

The list of names included top officials, members of the Saudi royal family, and global investor Prince Alwaleed bin Talal.

 

More than 2,000 bank accounts were frozen and private jets were grounded as detainees were rounded up and, in many cases, held in Riyadh’s opulent Ritz-Carlton hotel.

 

In January, Saudi Arabia’s attorney general released a statement saying it had completed its review of cases and would release all those who had paid settlements or against whom it did not have enough evidence.

 

 

It estimated the value of settlements at 400 billion Saudi riyals (more than £75 billion) “represented in various types of assets, including real estate, commercial entities, securities, cash and other assets.”

 

On Sunday, the Saudi government announced that the public prosecutor had begun investigations and opening arguments in the corruption cases of the 56 men still in custody.

 

According to deputy attorney general for investigations Saud al-Hamad, the charged men will be referred to court for prosecution in cases related to money laundering or terrorism.

 

Mr Hamad said some of those under investigation hadn’t respected confidential agreements, while others committed further, as yet unspecified, offences.

 

The anti-corruption campaign was framed as part of Mohammad bin Salman’s push to transform Saudi’s oil-dependent economy, which has been long plagued by graft, and make it more modern, diversified, and capable of withstanding diving oil prices.

 

But critics say the blanket of secrecy that has cloaked proceedings, as well as the lack of detail on financial settlements reached, suggests it was more about gathering cash and shoring up the crown prince’s growing authority than tackling corruption.

 

 

Terrorism charges?? Are they waiting until our indictments are released??

Anonymous ID: eaa86a Oct. 16, 2018, 7:30 p.m. No.3503991   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4001

Bin Laden Family Business Denies Liability for 9/11

 

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By Larry Neumeister

Associated Press

Tuesday, September 4, 2007

 

NEW YORK – The Saudi Binladin Group is not liable for the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks because it made Osama bin Laden surrender his stake in the company 14 years ago, attorneys for the multinational engineering firm argue.

 

The terrorist mastermind was forced out in 1993 as a shareholder in two companies his family owns, the lawyers wrote in court filings responding to lawsuits over the attacks.

 

The company filed the defense papers Friday in U.S. District Court in answer to claims brought by victims' representatives, survivors and insurance carriers. The plaintiffs, who seek billions of dollars in damages, allege that the Saudi Binladin Group joined numerous banks, charities and individuals in providing material support and assistance to al-Qaeda before the attacks.

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The plaintiffs contend that Bakr Binladin – Osama bin Laden's brother and chairman of Saudi Binladin Group – was one of al-Qaeda's principal financiers.

 

A judge in July had ordered Saudi Binladin Group to provide additional information about where the money for Osama bin Laden's 2 percent stake in the company went.

 

In the Friday filing, Saudi Binladin lawyers said that Bakr Binladin publicly renounced Osama bin Laden in a statement released to the media in February 1994. Two months later, the Saudi government revoked Osama bin Laden's citizenship and froze his assets, the lawyers noted.

 

These actions, they said, occurred well before the United States first placed Osama bin Laden on its list of designated terrorist individuals and organizations, on Aug. 20, 1998.

 

Osama bin Laden has more than 50 siblings who share in the fortune amassed after their father, Mohammed Binladin , built his construction empire, elevating his family to among the wealthiest in Saudi Arabia.

 

Most of the family uses the Binladin spelling, as do court documents.

 

The Sept. 11 commission concluded that the Sudanese government took Osama bin Laden's assets when he left Sudan in 1996.

 

Attorneys for the Binladin family companies have said Osama bin Laden never received any buyout payment.

 

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/09/03/AR2007090301215.html