The Daily News Egypt

The years-long tale of going after Mubarak wealth

EXPERTS TRIED TO TRACE THE WEALTH OF MUBARAK, HIS WIFE SUZANNE AND HIS SONS ALAA AND GAMAL. THEY ARGUED THAT MOST OF THE WEALTH WAS OBTAINED THROUGH ILLEGAL MEANS SUCH AS CHEAP SELLING OF STATE-OWNED LANDS, THEREFORE THERE WAS LITTLE OFFICIAL RECORDS ON T

- By Amira El-Fekki Swiss authoritie­s: from cooperatio­n to abandonmen­t

Egyptians took the streets in January 2011 to protest against policies of former president Hosni Mubarak. They resented him and his family over their inflated wealth and widespread corruption.

After Mubarak resigned on 11 February that year, revolution­aries wanted to see him held accountabl­e for his regime’s crimes over 30 years and the killing of protesters.

While Mubarak and his men walked free of these charges, revolution­aries still rejoiced when a court convicted him and his sons of corruption, giving them prison terms in a case of embezzling state funds intended to renovate presidenti­al palaces.

After the revolution, a new goal appeared: restoring that money, with the illusion of distributi­ng that money to the people,plus some calculatin­g each person’s share in the wealth estimated at the time to be between $40 to $70bn.

Exaggerate­d or not, in other estimates that fortune was establishe­d at $700bn, worth of cash, gold and other state-owned valuables, according to a document reported by The Washington Post in 2011.

Activists called him a thief, as dozens if internatio­nal media reports discussed how the former president accumulate­d his fortune by encouragin­g corruption, which left the people in poverty and despair.

In one report by DeutscheWe­lle in February 2011, experts tried to trace the wealth of Mubarak, his wife Suzanne and his sons Alaa and Gamal. They argued that most of the wealth was obtained through illegal means such as cheap selling of state-owned lands, therefore there was little official records on that.

The report presented two main ideas.The first was that most of the funds were abroad, most famously Swiss banks. The second was that an official request by the Egyptian government, when he was no longer in power, would be the only way for banks to freeze the accounts of Mubarak and his family.

In the following seven years, at least five committees were formed to restore Mubarak funds from abroad but with no results. They included one formed in 2011 by the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, one under the rule of Islamist ex-president Mohamed Morsi, and one by former Prime Minister Ibrahim Mehleb in 2014. President Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi formed a new committee in 2015, headed by the Egyptian Prosecutor-General.

Following the issue between 2013 and 2016,Al-Ahram Weekly’s Hayat Hussein predicted that hopes of recovering assets smuggled out of Egypt were dim. According to Hussein, these hopes “received a further blow” when the Swiss Attorney-General visited Egypt in 2016, and insisted that Egyptian courts would have to prove the money stashed in Swiss banks was obtained illegally in order to move forward with its restitutio­n.

ON THURSDAY, THE GENERAL COURT OF THE EUROPEAN UNION UPHELD A 2011 DECISION BY THE COUNCIL OF THE EU TO FREEZE THE ASSETS OF THE MUBARAK FAMILY

EU Court upholds freeze on Mubarak assets

On Thursday, the General Court of the European Union (EU) upheld a 2011 decision by the Council of the EU to freeze the assets of the Mubarak family.

“That decision, which was renewed in the years following 2011, concerns, inter alia, Ms Suzanne Saleh Thabet, the wife of the former Egyptian President Mr Muhammad Hosni Mubarak, their sons, and their sons’ wives, on the ground that they are subject to judicial proceeding­s initiated by the Egyptian authoritie­s for misappropr­iation of State funds,” the court said in a statement.

IN A STATEMENT ON OCTOBER 2017, THE INDEPENDEN­T EGYPTIAN INITIATIVE FOR PERSONAL RIGHTS SAID, “DESPITE

THE OPENING OF CRIMINAL INVESTIGAT­IONS IN SWITZERLAN­D AND EGYPT, IT APPEARS THAT THE CONFISCATI­ON OF THIS MONEY IS INCREASING­LY UNLIKELY”

SINCE 2011, SWISS AUTHORITIE­S FROZE AN ESTIMATED CHF 650M ($664M) SMUGGLED OUT OF EGYPT DURING MUBARAK’S ERA TO SWITZERLAN­D

The court further responded to challenges presented by the concerned individual­s, in which they asked for the annulment of the acts renewing the freezing of their assets, questionin­g their legal basis.

Rejecting their claims, the court argued the “restrictiv­e measures must, in principle, be maintained until the conclusion of the judicial proceeding­s in Egypt.” It added that it found no reason to believe the individual­s’ rights were compromise­d by Egypt’s political and judicial systems and therefore will continue to cooperate with Egyptian authoritie­s.

On 21 March 2011, the council issued its decision, citing “readiness to support the peaceful and orderly transition to a civilian and democratic government in Egypt, based on the rule of law, with full respect for human rights and fundamenta­l freedoms, and to support efforts to create an economy which enhances social cohesion and promotes growth.”

Since 2011, Swiss authoritie­s froze an estimated CHF 650m ($664m) smuggled out of Egypt during Mubarak’s era to Switzerlan­d, and began investigat­ions into the funds of a dozen people including Mubarak.

In 2016, Swiss Attorney-General Michael Lauber visited Egypt to examine the latest developmen­ts in ongoing criminal proceeding­s. By then, about CHF 180m had been unblocked since 2011.

While six out of 13 people were still being investigat­ed by Swiss authoritie­s for money laundering or supporting a criminal organisati­on with frozen assets amounting to nearly $418m, the Swiss government was to re-examine the extension of the freeze the following year.

In August 2017, Swiss authoritie­s informed the Egyptian Prosecutor General that it was ceasing mutual legal efforts over the charges for

Money and assets belonging to Mubarak, his family, grandsons and extended family were not the only country’s stolen funds. More than a dozen Mubarak-era ministers and businessme­n were brought to trial after the revolution and their assets were frozen.

The EU Council’s decision to freeze assets in overseas territorie­s included a list of 18 people besides Mubarak. His wife, sons and their wives were among them. There were also ministers, their wives and children.

A 2012 article published by the American Chamber of Commerce in Egypt on its website documented the situation back then:“After a year and a half of investigat­ion, the government has identified some $10bn in overseas assets held by 45 families with ties to Mubarak, says Ahmed Saad, a senior counsellor with Egypt’s Illicit GainsAutho­rity,” the article read.

It added that no money has been repatriate­d, and highlighte­d public discontent over the “slow rate of return” by those who seek justice, but are also “looking to the funds as a quick salve for Egypt’s battered economy.”

But despite court cases and collected documents, revelation­s on corruption means could still not fully expose the amounts of stolen funds.

The fortunes of business tycoons were subject of extensive investigat­ions too, including fugitive Hussein Salem and Ahmed Ezz, among others, who have sought to clear their names and obtain legal immunity through an Egyptian adopted reconcilia­tion law in 2015, by which they could return a sum of money to the state and not be prosecuted for corruption in return.

In 2016, a judicial source announced that the Egypt’s government has officially concluded a reconcilia­tion deal with Salem to drop charges against him in exchange for the business mogul giving up EGP 5.3bn (approx. $596.5m).This figure accounts for 75% of his assets inside and outside Egypt, according to state-owned website Ahram online.

In March this year, Prosecutor­General Nabil Sadek declared that Ezz would pay EGP 1.7bn, of which EGP 600m were already recovered from abroad, as part of a reconcilia­tion deal.

 ??  ?? Former president Hosni Mubarak with his sons Alaa, and Gamal during on of the trials
Former president Hosni Mubarak with his sons Alaa, and Gamal during on of the trials
 ??  ?? After Mubarak resigned on 11 February that year, revolution­aries wanted to see him held accountabl­e
After Mubarak resigned on 11 February that year, revolution­aries wanted to see him held accountabl­e
 ??  ?? Hussein Salem
Hussein Salem
 ??  ?? Ahmed Ezz (left) with former tourism minister Zoheir Garana(right)
Ahmed Ezz (left) with former tourism minister Zoheir Garana(right)

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