Waikato Times

Gold trader links Turkish leader to sanctions scheme

- AP

TURKEY/UNITED STATES: The star witness in a trial that’s strained US diplomatic relations with Turkey testified yesterday that he believed the country’s president, while prime minister, signed off on a scheme that used tens of millions in bribes and kickbacks to help Iran evade economic sanctions.

It was the first time that President Recep Tayyip Erdogan was named in the ongoing testimony of Reza Zarrab, a wealthy TurkishIra­nian businessma­n who has pleaded guilty to charges he orchestrat­ed the fraud.

In a transcript of an intercepte­d phone call in 2012 with an associate, Zarrab claimed he had been told that ‘‘the prime minister gave orders’’ for two Turkish banks to participat­e in the sham gold trades that helped Iran gain access to oil and gas proceeds.

Asked by a prosecutor about the claim, Zarrab said the country’s economic minister, Zafer Gaglayan, ‘‘told me that Mr Prime Minister had given approval for this work’’ by the banks. Asked who the prime minister was at time, he responded, ‘‘Mr Recep Erdogan.’’

In other testimony, the 34-yearold Zarrab told a New York jury that Suleyman Aslan, general manager of the state-run HalkBank, demanded the secret payments for helping break the US sanctions. He previously testified that Gaglayan was already skimming part of the hefty profits Zarrab was making as the scheme’s middleman.

‘‘This one is asking for money too,’’ Zarrab said of Aslan in another 2012 phone call.

The US case has been major news in Turkey, where Zarrab is well known. Officials there have called it a charade aimed at discrediti­ng Erdogan’s government.

Halkbank also has challenged the accusation­s. In a statement yesterday, it insisted it ‘‘strictly adheres to national and internatio­nal regulation­s’’ in all businesses and transactio­ns.

Zarrab is testifying against another Halkbank official, Mehmet Hakan Atilla, after agreeing to co-operate in hopes of getting a reduced sentence.

Atilla has pleaded not guilty to charges alleging he was Zarrab’s behind-the-scenes fixer for moving Iranian money through world banks, including US financial institutio­ns, in violation of the economic embargo. His lawyer, Victor Rocco, told jurors in an opening statement that Zarrab is ‘‘a liar, a cheat ... a one-man crime wave’’ while his client, by contrast, is not corrupt and took no bribes.

Zarrab testified yesterday that he never bribed Atilla because he was already bribing Atilla’s boss and economic minister. ‘‘I didn’t see a need to pay another individual.’’

Zarrab had been housed until early this month in a Manhattan jail, where he was taken after his 2016 arrest when he arrived in the United States with his wife, Turkish pop star Ebru Gundes, and his daughter, for a trip to Disney World. He won release from jail as part of the plea deal. He remains in the custody of FBI agents. Zarrab said he’s still with the FBI ‘‘for security purposes because of the threats I received at the detention centre.’’

On Thursday, he appeared in drab jail-style scrubs in his first day of testimony, a look that the judge questioned. When Zarrab stepped onto the witness stand yesterday for a second day, the witness was in a dark suit jacket and slacks, explaining his lawyers had told him he could wear a different outfit.

Both Aslan and Gaglayan are named in the US indictment with Zarrab and Atilla.

 ?? PHOTO: AP ?? Turkish-Iranian gold trader Reza Zarrab, centre, testifies before Judge Richard Berman, right, that he helped Iran evade US economic sanctions with help from Turkish banker Mehmet Hakan Atilla.
PHOTO: AP Turkish-Iranian gold trader Reza Zarrab, centre, testifies before Judge Richard Berman, right, that he helped Iran evade US economic sanctions with help from Turkish banker Mehmet Hakan Atilla.
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