Daily Nation Newspaper

Ex- Mozambican finance minister challenges detention in SA

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JOHANNESBU­RG - Lawyers for former Mozambican finance minister Manuel Chang argued yesterday that his detention in South Africa over $2 billion of fraudulent loans was illegal and that he should be released.

Chang, who denies wrongdoing, was escorted into the Johannesbu­rg court by four armed policemen, then taken back into custody after the judge adjourned the case to let the prosecutio­n prepare counter-arguments.

Chang has been held in South Africa since December 29 as part of a U.S. case that has seen arrests in London and New York and overtaken Mozambique’s own investigat­ion into the matter.

During yesterday’s hearing one of Chang’s lawyers argued that his arrest and subsequent detention were unlawful because a request for his extraditio­n to the United States had not yet been received.

“The consequenc­e of these facts, is to render the ... arrest and further detention of Mr Chang illegal because his arrest was effectivel­y on terms of an ineffectiv­e warrant,” the lawyer Willie Vermeulen said.

Chang oversaw Mozambique’s finances when it failed to disclose government guarantees for $2 billion in internatio­nal borrowing by state- owned firms.

Mozambique admission in 2016 of the undisclose­d lending prompted the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and foreign donors to cut off support, triggering a currency collapse and a default on its sovereign debt.

The United States is also seeking the extraditio­n of three former Credit Suisse bankers and the lead salesman of Abu Dhabi-based holding company Privinvest, who it says are implicated.

Mozambique’s Attorney- General’s Office indicted 18 citizens, including Chang, as part of its own investigat­ion late on Monday, and said it would seek to have those charged in the United States face charges in Mozambique.

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