Daily Tribune (Philippines)

U.S. forfeits former Mongolia PM’s luxury apartments

Former prime minister Sukhbaatar Batbold used kickbacks to buy $14 million apartments in Manhattan

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WASHINGTON, United States (AFP) — The United States has said it will attempt to seize two luxury apartments in New York owned by former Mongolian prime minister Sukhbaatar Batbold that it said were bought with the proceeds of a corrupt scheme.

Mongolia, a landlocked democracy sandwiched between its much larger neighbors China and Russia, is rich in deposits of coal, metals and other minerals.

A years-long mining boom has helped ease historical­ly high poverty rates but also fuelled elite corruption that has sparked social unrest.

The US Justice Department on Tuesday unsealed a civil complaint claiming that Batbold used his position to award Mongolian mining contracts in return for the equivalent of millions of dollars in kickbacks.

He allegedly splashed $14 million of that income on a pair of properties in Manhattan’s ritzy Midtown and Upper East Side neighborho­ods, the department said.

“Today’s forfeiture action sends a message that corrupt officials will not use our real estate market to conceal proceeds of crimes,” said Breon Peace, US Attorney for New York’s Eastern District, in an accompanyi­ng press release.

The Mongolian Prime Minister’s office did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on Wednesday, and an adviser for Batbold directed Agence France-Presse to his legal representa­tives in New York.

According to the complaint, Batbold and his family used state-owned mining contracts to move money through shell companies to fund lavish lifestyles.

In one example, a company owned by Batbold’s “trusted intermedia­ries” was handed a $68 million contract despite having “no operationa­l history, no mining expertise, and no financial or logistical infrastruc­ture to execute commodity sales.”

Millions of dollars from those contracts were then allegedly funneled into foreign bank accounts, filtered through a succession of shadowy shell firms and finally spent on the apartments and other items.

Batbold, 60, served as Mongolian prime minister from 2009 to 2012 and continues to represent the ruling party in the country’s parliament.

He was later named in the Panama and Pandora papers, two major leaks detailing the overseas financial affairs of wealthy individual­s and politician­s.

Mongolia will hold legislativ­e elections in June, in which incumbent Prime Minister Luvsannams­rain Oyun-Erdene will seek to maintain the ruling party’s majority in parliament.

 ?? ENRIQUE CASTRO/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? AERIAL view of a forest fire that affects an avocado plantation in Cerro del Aguila, recognized as a Protected Natural Area and Forest Restoratio­n site, in Morelia, state of Michoacan, Mexico. Forest fires affecting 18 of Mexico’s 32 states have devastated 3,049 hectares of forested areas as of Tuesday, according to a report by authoritie­s.
ENRIQUE CASTRO/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE AERIAL view of a forest fire that affects an avocado plantation in Cerro del Aguila, recognized as a Protected Natural Area and Forest Restoratio­n site, in Morelia, state of Michoacan, Mexico. Forest fires affecting 18 of Mexico’s 32 states have devastated 3,049 hectares of forested areas as of Tuesday, according to a report by authoritie­s.

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