NO SMOKE WITHOUT FIRE IN FAKE CIGARETTE SCAM?
▶ A shadowy businessman’s escape from arrest has people muttering about corruption and calling for tougher measures, writes Taylor Luck in Amman
The man at the heart of a multimillion-dollar corruption case in Jordan is a virtual unknown and that is making people suspicious.
Weeks ago, Jordanian officials announced the arrest of 30 people over a counterfeit cigarette production and smuggling scheme that involved an estimated US$100 million (Dh367.3m) in annual lost tax and customs revenue.
At the heart of the case was a businessman, Awni Mutee, who was able to flee the kingdom the day before the raid on his factories.
Almost nothing is known about Mr Mutee, who unlike many Jordanian businessmen is not known to come from a prominent family nor a powerful tribe. No one has come forward in local media to offer information on what kind of businesses he ran, or even that they knew him as a neighbour.
Which leaves many Jordanians to suspect he was merely a frontman or fall guy for shadowy business elites in the country, despite officials on Tuesday issuing a red notice through Interpol for his arrest and extradition.
The government’s forwarding of the cigarettes case to the country’s State Security Court – a mixed military-civil tribunal that conducts some of its proceedings behind closed doors – and local news reports yesterday claiming Mr Mutee’s presence in Lebanon was “not confirmed”, has done little to diminish suspicions.
From fruit sellers to imams, government clerks to the king himself, one word is on Jordanians’ lips – corruption.
While officials are vowing to prosecute the cigarette case thoroughly and use it as a springboard for a wider anti-corruption drive, there is a perception among ordinary Jordanians that the elite are not playing by the same rules.
As the new government prepares to make some tough economic decisions, it also needs to rebuild public trust. As such, battling corruption – real and perceived – has taken centre-stage.
And the main source of pressure in the clean-up campaign is the monarch.
“Combating corruption remains, as we have said before, the main priority for this government, for me, for all our institutions in the country,” King Abdullah II told the Cabinet on Sunday. “The message to the people is: we want to break the back of corruption in the country. It’s enough ... we want to move forward.”
No one was above the law, he said.
Prime Minister Omar Al Razzaz was quick to reiterate that the government was following the king’s directives, saying that this time there was political will. Less than two months ago, his predecessor resigned after nationwide protests at the state of the economy.
“There is no impunity for the corrupt,” Mr Al Razzaz wrote in posts on Facebook and Twitter on Tuesday. “This time, [by] insisting on tackling corruption, the political will is crucial to uprooting it and holding the corrupt accountable.”
Mr Al Razzaz has a tall task before him in winning over a deeply sceptical public. While Jordanians are eager to see the cigarettes case followed through and millions of dollars returned to the state, nearly all doubt whether any “big names” will end up behind bars. All say this case is just the “tip of the iceberg”.
“In Jordan, the poor people, the working class, we are the only ones that follow the law, pay fines, pay taxes and pay customs,” said Omar Ibrahim, 26, a fruit seller in Amman.
“But the big bosses, the masterminds, they play by a different set of rules, and they never get mentioned and they are never held accountable.”
Recent history gives Jordanians plenty of reasons to be pessimistic about the chances of change.
The most high-profile corruption case to come to light in recent years involved the embezzlement of more than $40m from the Jordan Phosphates Mines Company. But the man convicted – Walid Kurdi, former chief executive and husband of King Abdullah’s paternal aunt – fled Jordan and has never served jail time.
In 2013, an Amman criminal court sentenced Kurdi to 37 years in prison and fined him 253 million Jordanian dinars (Dh1.3 billion) in his absence. Today Kurdi is living in the UK despite an extradition request filed with Interpol by Amman.
The only major figure serving time for corruption is Mohammed Dahabi, a former intelligence chief handed a 13-year prison sentence in 2012 for the embezzlement of $34m. Yet many insist the selective arrest of Dahabi was politically motivated and used to settle a score between power brokers.
Meanwhile, social media channels are alight with other names and alleged corrupt practices that people say they want exposed, implicating officials ranging from ministers to mayors.
“His Majesty is working hard and doing the right things ... yet we have seen in previous cases, such as the phosphates case, in the end, no one was held accountable and the public does not even know the whereabouts of the accused,” said Rania Bader, spokeswoman for NGO Rasheed (Transparency International-Jordan).
“I think the public trust isn’t there yet,” Ms Bader said. “The government must take concrete actions and steps to pinpoint the sources of corruption in a transparent manner for the public.”
The issue of corruption has come back into the spotlight at a critical time in Jordan. With the country facing a JD523 million deficit and a debt-to-GDP ratio hovering above 90 per cent, the government will have to reconsider an unpopular income tax and assess government hiring to cut debt and continue an IMF loan programme.
In a public opinion poll in July by the Centre for Strategic Studies at the University of Jordan, subjects identified corruption as the second leading reason behind Jordan’s economic woes, right behind rising prices and the cost of living.
According to an Arab Barometer survey in 2016, 79 per cent of Jordanians believe there is corruption in state institutions and agencies to a medium or large extent.
During the economic protests in June, demonstrators repeated a common refrain: crack down on corruption first before raising our taxes.
“There is a gap between what the king said in his statements and what happens on the ground,” said Hassan Barari, professor of political science at the University of Jordan.
“It seems that while the king is saying something that rings nicely in the ears of people, his agencies – whether it be the judicial system, government or parliament – are not doing anything when it comes to corruption.”
Rather than just a few high-profile cases, Transparency International and others are calling for the government to undertake deeper reforms to ensure external audits, improve public sector management, raise transparency in political financing, enforce asset declarations for officials and politicians, improve legislative oversight, and even to hold public hearings on draft laws.
Yet perhaps the most critical step for Jordan to eliminate corruption, they say, is financial and public sector procurement reform to transparently show how government contracts are awarded, to whom and who benefits.
Until those steps are taken, public resentment will probably continue.
“The networks of officials, of businessmen and fat cats is wider than the government would have you believe. The cigarettes case is a drop in the ocean,” said Mohammed Suleiman, an Amman taxi driver.
“We don’t want to see drops, we want the whole ocean drained.”