Bangkok Post

‘Luanda Leaks’ rips African mega-mogul

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NEW YORK: An award-winning investigat­ive team published a trove of files on Sunday allegedly showing how Africa’s richest woman syphoned hundreds of millions of dollars of public money into offshore accounts.

The New York-based Internatio­nal Consortium of Investigat­ive Journalist­s (ICIJ) worked with newspapers such as Munich’s Suddeutsch­e Zeitung to reveal the “Panama Papers” tax haven scandal in 2016.

Its latest series called “Luanda Leaks” zeroes in on Isabel dos Santos, the daughter of former Angola president

Jose Eduardo dos Santos.

Angola’s prosecutor­s last month froze the bank accounts and assets owned by the 46-year-old businesswo­man and her Con- golese husband Sindika Dokolo, which she described as a groundless political vendetta against her.

“Based on a trove of more than 715,000 files, our investigat­ion highlights a broken internatio­nal regulatory system that allows profession­al services firms to serve the powerful with almost no questions asked,” the ICIJ wrote.

The group said its team of 120 reporters in 20 countries was able to trace “how an army of Western financial firms, lawyers, accountant­s, government officials and management companies helped (dos Santos and Dokolo) hide assets from tax authoritie­s”.

Ms Dos Santos took to Twitter to refute the claims, launching a salvo of around 30 tweets in Portuguese and English, and accusing journalist­s involved in the investigat­ion of telling “lies”.

“My fortune is built on my character, my intelligen­ce, education, capacity for work, perseveran­ce,” she wrote.

She also blasted “the racism and prejudice” of SIC-Expresso, a Portuguese TV station and newspaper, and member of the ICIJ, “that recall the colonial era when an African could never be considered equal to a European”.

Ms Dos Santos’s lawyer dismissed the ICIJ findings as a “highly coordinate­d attack” orchestrat­ed by Angola’s current rulers, in a statement quoted by The Guardian newspaper.

Ms Dos Santos herself told BBC Africa the file dump was part of a “witch hunt” meant to discredit her and her father.

The former president’s daughter headed Angola’s national oil company Sonangol. Forbes magazine last year estimated her net worth at US$2.2 billion (66.7 billion baht)

Her father’s successor Joao Lourenco forced her out of the oil company after becoming president in 2017.

Ms Dos Santos said last week that she would consider running for president in the next election in 2022.

The ICIJ investigat­ion said Western consulting firms such as PwC and Boston Consulting Group were “apparently ignoring red flags” while helping her stash away public assets.

 ??  ?? Dos Santos: Probe a ‘witch hunt’
Dos Santos: Probe a ‘witch hunt’

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