Anonymous ID: 2a1d90 Jan. 5, 2019, 4:35 p.m. No.4616874   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7162 >>7418

Three Ex-Credit Suisse Bankers, Ex-Minister Arrested Over $2 Billion Loan Fraud

 

The arrested conspirators are said to be involved in a large-scale credit fraud that ruined the economy of Mozambique in 2016.

 

Three former Credit Suisse Group bankers have been arrested in London in connection with a loan fraud scheme that ruined the economy of Mozambique in 2016 according to UK authorities, cited by the South African Eyewitness News outlet.

 

Andrew Pearse, 49, Surjan Singh, 44, and Detelina Subeva, 37, have been charged in a federal court in Brooklyn, New York, and the US now seeks extradition of the three. The trio has currently been released on bail.

 

A fourth alleged conspirator, former Mozambique finance minister Manuel Chang, was arrested in South Africa's OR Tambo International Airport some five days ago.

 

A fifth man, Jean Boustani, a Lebanese citizen who worked for an Abu Dhabi-based contractor to Mozambican companies, was arrested on Wednesday at New York's John F. Kennedy Airport, according to a CNBC report.

 

Three state-owned Mozambique companies borrowed some $2 billion through loans guaranteed by the government and arranged by Credit Suisse and another investment bank between 2013-2016 under the pretext of conducting maritime infrastructure projects in the African nation. An indictment, issued by the US District Court's Eastern District of New York, says that three firms were fronts the conspirators used to enrich themselves.

 

The indictment accuses the conspirators of "creat[ing] the maritime projects as fronts to raise money to enrich themselves and intentionally divert[ing] portions of the loan proceeds to pay at least $200 million in bribes and kickbacks to themselves, Mozambican government officials and others."

 

The borrowed money subsequently disappeared and the government of Mozambique learned about the loan scheme three years later. In 2016, it publicly admitted to an undisclosed loan, which prompted the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to cut off support to the nation, triggering an economic collapse and a default on sovereign debt.

 

Credit Suisse issued a statement saying it will continue to cooperate with authorities on the investigation.

 

https://sputniknews.com/africa/201901061071249560-credit-suisse-minister-arrested-mozambique/