Daily Maverick

Dirty Money Dubai

It’s a playground for the world’s rich and dubious – like the Guptas – where global corruption is the game, but Dubai’s days of impunity may be numbered.

- By Marianne Thamm

Mention Dubai and many South Africans will instantly clock three touchpoint­s: former president Jacob Zuma, his son Duduzane, who owns a R18-million apartment in the “iconic” skyscraper Burj Khalifa and the Gupta family, who funnelled South African taxpayers’ money through this UAE desert city, a haven for the world’s dirty and rotten.

A just-published report by the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace titled “Dubai’s Role in Facilitati­ng Corruption and Illicit Financial Flows” found that Dubai has become a global financial centre underpinne­d by “a steady stream of illicit proceeds from corruption and crime”.

The report cites Dubai as a key global money-laundering destinatio­n and highlights widespread concerns about its role in “enabling global corruption and its many destabiliz­ing effects”.

While the South African connection is not explored in the report, Dubai, with its artificial islands and luxury malls, its nightlife, its fine dining, seaside attraction­s and free trade zones, has drawn a fair number of South African high-profiles, particular­ly during the peak State Capture years.

Rotating minister of sports/police/transport Fikile Mbalula holidayed there in 2016 with sports supplier Sedgars director Yusuf Dockrat picking up the tab. Mosebenzi Zwane passed through, as did a steady stream of South Afrian celebritie­s from Mabala Noise founder Reggie Nkabinde to Somizi.

In 2015, ANC secretary-general Ace Magasule’s sons, Tshepiso and Thato, travelled to Dubai, courtesy of the Gupta family, where they stayed in the Oberoi Hotel, billing Sahara Computers R40,000 for their eight-day stay.

The Oberoi was the hotel of choice for the Gupta brothers, who would meet all manner of South African government officials, most of whom currently receive frequent mentions at the Zondo Commission of Inquiry into State Capture.

South African luminaries entertaine­d by the Guptas in Dubai included Anoj Singh (former CEO of Transnet and Eskom), Fana Hlongwane, Des van Rooyen (Weekend Special minister of finance), Daniel Mantsha (chair of Denel), Matshela Koko (Eskom), Siyabonga Gama (Transnet), Salim Essa (face of the Guptas), Muhammad Saloojee (KPMG), Kim Davids (Minister Lynne Brown’s PA) and Ayanda Dlodlo (current minister of state security).

Since its establishm­ent in 1971 after independen­ce from Britain, Dubai has grown into one of the wealthiest of the seven emirates that make up the UAE. A 2016 census put its population at 2,645,581.

While the report notes that the vast majority of financial, business and property transactio­ns in Dubai are not associated with illegal activity, leaked documents – from the Panama Papers to Angola’s Luanda Leaks to Dubai’s property registry – show that Dubai “is a place where many people associated with criminal activity feel free to settle down with their families, manage their networks, and engage in smuggling and money laundering”.

The emirate offers those who choose to live there “a luxurious lifestyle and amenities – shopping, dining, nightlife – on par with other global top city destinatio­ns, including London, New

York, and Paris”, notes the report.

And while Dubai has undertaken various reforms to bring the operations of trade and financial institutio­ns more closely in line with internatio­nal standards, significan­t loopholes continue to enable criminal activity.

Underpinni­ng Dubai’s prosperity, the report notes, “is a steady stream of illicit proceeds borne [sic] from corruption and crime. The wealth has helped to fuel the emirate’s booming real estate market; enrich its bankers, moneychang­ers, and business elites; and turn Dubai into a major gold trading hub.”

Both Emirati leaders and the internatio­nal community, however, continue to “turn a blind eye to the problemati­c behaviors, administra­tive loopholes, and weak enforcemen­t practices that make Dubai a globally attractive destinatio­n for dirty money”.

The report sets out a typical example of the type of exposed individual freely doing business in Dubai. In 2014, it notes, a businessma­n made a “routine” call from his home in the luxury neighbourh­ood of Clifton in Karachi, Pakistan.

“He was checking with his assistant, Yasir, on the status of his real estate investment in Dubai’s Al Khail Gate, an upscale community of apartments and townhomes close to several internatio­nal schools, malls, and recreation centers.

“The conversati­on was the normal sort of back and forth on building permission­s, the escrow account, advertisin­g, and sales numbers. But, in actuality, the call was anything but ordinary: the businessma­n was Dawood Ibrahim, a transnatio­nal criminal with a net worth of about $6.7-billion and, at the time, India’s most wanted man.”

Tapes of Ibrahim’s conversati­on were leaked in 2018. The FBI is in the process of investigat­ing his “criminal enterprise” known as D Company, which operates out of Pakistan and the UAE. Ibrahim also happens to find himself on the UN Security Council’s al-Qaeda sanctions list.

“The tapes highlight the unique and often underappre­ciated role that Dubai plays in various illicit activities throughout the world, despite its being renowned as an internatio­nal banking center, a global trade hub, and a stable polity in an otherwise unstable region.”

While “incrementa­l reforms are feasible, realistic, and in the strategic interest of Emirati leaders and their internatio­nal partners”, Dubai’s role as a facilitato­r of corruption is unsustaina­ble over the long term.

Being placed under observatio­n by the FATF (Financial Action Task Force) is an important signal that internatio­nal scrutiny and pressure on Dubai’s activities would increase, notes the report.

“Moreover, the emirate will remain disproport­ionately vulnerable to external shocks like the 2008 global financial crisis, when not only legitimate business, real estate, travel, and finance markets suffered but also criminal enterprise­s”.

The emirate could immediatel­y begin “weaning itself off illicit financial flows” by enforcing existing laws more effectivel­y and transparen­tly.

Dubai could also tighten regulation of the property, gold, and banking sectors; liberalise labour laws; tackle trade-based money laundering; and deepen co-operation with internatio­nal law enforcemen­t.

The foremost challenge is the “huge scope and sophistica­tion of illicit financial flows and global facilitati­on networks that terminate in or transit through Dubai.”

“Secretive and standoffis­h, Dubai often rebuffs outside attempts to discern whether kleptocrat­s and criminals are buying property or laundering money through the emirate. Internatio­nal law enforcemen­t agencies find it especially difficult to acquire informatio­n and solicit co-operation from Emirati authoritie­s.”

The Gupta family left South Africa in haste in 2016 for Dubai. The main attraction for the fugitives was the lack of an extraditio­n treaty between SA and the emirate.

However, in 2018, South Africa signed an extraditio­n treaty with the United Arab Emirates (UAE), which significan­tly upped the possibilit­y that the Guptas could return to face the music in South Africa.

The treaty, however, is yet to be ratified by Dubai authoritie­s.

In December 2019, Minister of Justice Ronald Lamola said he would be using a corruption conference in Abu Dhabi to initiate talks with their Dubai counterpar­ts with regard to the Guptas.

In May 2020, Lamola told Parliament’s Justice Committee that the government was now relying on a UN convention for assistance with getting the Guptas to South Africa.

And the whole of South Africa will be eager to welcome the Gupta family back to our shores before we settle in for hours of live televised court proceeding­s. One can still hope.

The Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace is a foreign-policy think tank with centres in Washington DC, Moscow, Beirut, Beijing, Brussels, and New Delhi. The report titled “Dubai’s Role in Facilitati­ng Corruption and Illicit Financial Flows” was authored by Shawn Blore, Brian George, Karen Greenaway, Marcena Hunter, Peter Kirechu, Lakshmi Kumar, Matthew T Page, Mustafa Qadri, Kristian Coates Ulrichsen, and Jodi Vittori.

 ?? Photo: Ashish Laddha / Pixabay Photo: Ayko Neil Kehl / Unsplash ?? Foggy Dubai Pearl Divers
Photo: Ashish Laddha / Pixabay Photo: Ayko Neil Kehl / Unsplash Foggy Dubai Pearl Divers
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