Showing posts with label Egypt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Egypt. Show all posts
on Wednesday, June 13, 2012
Egypt's former Tourism Minister Zuhair Garranah has been jailed for five years on charges of corruption, an Egyptian judicial source has said.

Garranah had handed out tourism licences illegally, the source said.

Last week, ex-Interior Minister Habib al-Adly was jailed for 12 years for money-laundering and profiteering.

A number of former officials are being investigated in Egypt following the popular uprising that ousted President Hosni Mubarak in February.

Mr Mubarak, 82, who is under investigation on suspicion of involvement in the killings of protesters, had his detention extended by 15 days on Tuesday, the state prosecutor's office said.

Garranah, who was sentenced along with two businessmen, was charged with wasting public funds worth $51m (£31m) after authorising the sale of state-owned land for well below the market price, the AFP news agency reports.

More than 20 Mubarak-era ministers and businessmen linked to the regime have been detained since Mr Mubarak's departure.

The trial of corrupt officials, including Mr Mubarak, was a key demand of protesters.

Mr Mubarak - who was ousted on 11 February - remains in a hospital in the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh, despite a directive from the new government that he too should be moved to prison.

Officials said Mr Mubarak's detention would be extended by 15 days from 12 May, when it was due to end.

At least 846 civilians were killed during 18 days of street protests. Most were shot in the head and chest.

Source: BBC
on Wednesday, June 6, 2012
Monday’s Cabinet meeting, chaired by King Abdullah, Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques, resulted in approval for measures to address issues concerning money laundering and terrorism funding as well as housing.


The King briefed the session, held at Al-Yamama Palace in the capital, on the most significant communications of the past week, including the visits to the Kingdom of the President of Egypt, Hosni Mubarak, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and the President of Sudan, Omar Hassan Al-Bashir.
King Abdullah also briefed the Cabinet on communications he received from the President of Yemen, Ali Abdullah Saleh, and his reception of Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmed Dawoud Awghlou and the Second Vice President of Afghanistan, Abdul Karim Khalili.

Minister of Culture and Information Abdul Aziz Khoja released a statement to the Saudi Press Agency (SPA) saying that the meeting looked at reports on developments in the Arab and Islamic world as well as wider international affairs and discussed the Kingdom’s economy following the recent announcement of the national budget.

Cabinet approval was given to authorize Prince Naif, Second Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Interior, to sign with foreign authorities a memorandum of understanding on collaboration in investigation into money laundering and the financing of terrorism.

Measures were also approved following a study on providing land grants to Saudi nationals to facilitate the acquisition of homes. The measures included joining the Ministry of Municipal and Rural Affairs program to the Iskan housing program to guarantee citizens housing, the provision of land to the Housing Commission to build homes for nationals in conformity with regulations and government-planned zones, provide all services stipulated for by the budget, and help beneficiaries of housing projects integrate with the rest of society by ensuring that projects are evenly distributed across cities. Cabinet approval was further given for the proposed Board of Directors at the Balad Al-Ameen Construction Development Company for the period of three years and its members from government, private and other sectors.

Similar approval was given for the restructuring of the Board of Directors of the Jeddah Development and Construction Company.

Source: The Saudi Gazette
on Tuesday, June 5, 2012
Ghana has been named as one of the countries whose citizens are stealing the identities of Australians.

News out in the Australian media say the theft which is in a large scale involves spies, drug dealers, illegal immigrants and people engaged in money laundering.

The report say passport details of five people emailed to a travel agent for travel for people from Ghana has been found.

One report by the Herald Sun citing documents from the country’s Department of Foreign Affairs and trade says the illegal practice of forging passports of living Australians is widespread.

According to the report, a fake or doctored Australian passport has been found, on average, once a week in the past three years.

Fake passports were detected at ports in countries including Britain, Dubai, Ghana, Thailand, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Malaysia, Egypt, Turkey, and Peru, the report indicated.

According to the report, some of the passports were in the hands of spies, smugglers and thieves.

Australian passports were used in 525 frauds in the last financial year, and many people were caught lying to get a passport, it said.

Source: Citifmonline
on Monday, June 4, 2012
Ahmad Zerfaoui is one of the world’s most wanted terrorists, according to the United Nations, which lists him as a member of al-Qaeda’s North African arm. It may be difficult to bring him to justice: He died three years ago. At least 42 dead people and as many as 69 defunct companies are among about 500 names on the UN’s list of alleged al-Qaeda and Taliban supporters, said Richard Barrett, who heads the world body’s committee monitoring sanctions on the groups and is working to clean up the register.


UN member states are reluctant to apply sanctions on the Taliban, al-Qaeda and their supporters because governments don’t know who on the list is a legitimate threat, Barrett said. The inaccuracies also hamper Obama administration efforts to motivate allies in the war on terrorism who don’t want to be seen as too close to the U.S., said Eric Rosand, a security analyst in New York.

“We turn to the UN for its global legitimacy, but if the UN tool is seen as illegitimate, you limit your effectiveness,” said Rosand, co-director of the Center on Global Counterterrorism Cooperation, an independent research group. “The UN has a lot of cachet where the U.S. is not appreciated.”

The list grew out of UN sanctions levied against the Taliban in 1999 after the Afghan Islamists refused to give up al-Qaeda operatives following the bombings of U.S. embassies in East Africa.

Assets and Travel

The sanctions, which require nations to freeze assets of those listed and bar them from travel and weapons transactions, were extended to al-Qaeda in 2000 and strengthened after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

“It was all a bit frantic after 9-11” and some names were added to the list that don’t belong, said Barrett.

All 15 Security Council nations must agree to add or remove any person or company from the register.

“There are dead people on the list and the committee can’t get them off,” Rosand said.

Groups on the list include Egyptian Islamic Jihad; branches of Saudi Arabia-based al-Haramain Islamic Foundation, which the UN called a main source of funds for al-Qaeda; and two honey shops and a bakery in Yemen whose owner was accused by the UN of being an al-Qaeda financier.

Thomas H. Nelson, an attorney for al-Haramain’s now- shuttered U.S. branch, called the terrorism accusation “ridiculous” in a phone interview from Welches, Oregon.

Barrett has removed 12 entities from the list this year. Some defunct companies are kept on to ensure they don’t revive, he said.

Death in Mali

Zerfaoui, who died in Mali in 2006, according to the UN, remains on the list because his name hasn’t come up for review.

“The problem with ‘dead’ people is proving that they are dead, particularly if they have died in ungoverned areas or countries where identities are uncertain and burials take place as soon as possible after death,” Barrett said in an e-mail.

Barrett, 60, a former officer of Britain’s MI6 spy agency, heads eight senior officials and about a dozen support staff from countries including Russia, France and the U.S., working from a midtown Manhattan office.

Many of Barrett’s security, intelligence and financial contacts are in countries that shy away from open cooperation with the U.S.

“This is a good way for the U.S. to get its agenda applied under a neutral flag,” said Barrett.

‘Significant Success’

Even with its flaws, the list helps the U.S. stifle al- Qaeda and the Taliban, said David S. Cohen, the Treasury’s assistant secretary for terrorist financing.

“We’ve had some significant success in degrading the financial facilitation networks by which al-Qaeda has been obtaining their funds,” he said in an interview.

Barrett said intelligence reports show al-Qaeda and the Taliban made several appeals for cash this year, a signal they are hurting from the sanctions. He said he didn’t have data from member states to show conclusively how much money has been seized under the sanctions.

Critics of the program including Jean-Charles Brisard, a former head of corporate intelligence at Paris-based Vivendi Universal SA, said the UN hasn’t kept up with terrorists’ financing methods. Since 2003, the amount of assets frozen and the number of names on the list has remained at about $80 million and 500 people, said Brisard, now a consultant for families of Sept. 11 victims.

“That’s quite ridiculous,” he said from Paris.

Legal Challenges

Countries have also been reluctant to enforce the sanctions out of concern the list won’t stand up to legal challenges, said Brisard and Barrett.

A Saudi businessman, Yassin Abdullah Kadi, also known as Yasin al-Qadi, who is on the list for allegedly supplying arms and funds to al-Qaeda and had his assets frozen, appealed to the European Court of Justice. The court ruled last year that the European Union regulations enforcing the UN sanctions denied his rights, including the right to judicial review. The asset freeze, the court said, was “an unjustified restriction” on property rights.

The council is discussing new rules on the listing and appeals process.

“For the sanctions to be efficient,” Barrett said, “they have to be respected.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Peter S. Green in New York at psgreen@bloomberg.net.

Source: Bloomberg
on Thursday, May 31, 2012
By Marie Magleby, Special to Gulf News
Published: May 31, 2008, 23:44

Abu Dhabi: Gary Price and Ernest Herbert carry FBI badges, but their job descriptions are significantly different here than in the US.

"I have no law enforcement authority here," Special Agent Price said.

Instead, the duo are go-betweens for local and US law enforcement. He said, "We work closely with UAE government officials to share information that protects the two countries."

They also offer training at the request of local authorities. The training involves many aspects of law enforcement, including ways to combat white-collar crime, violent crime, forensics and counter-terrorism.

In addition, the agents coordinate the Middle East Law Enforcement Training Centre in Dubai, which offers week-long courses for law enforcement personnel from around the Gulf.


Local authorities choose the topics and dates, and FBI specialists come from the US to teach the courses. Since its establishment in 2001, the centre, co-sponsored by the FBI and Dubai police, has conducted about 40 courses dealing with money laundering, computer crimes, intellectual property rights, kidnapping, auto theft, homicide, financial institution fraud, terrorist financing, hostage negotiations and more.

The globalisation of crime, especially financial and internet crime, places the agents in a pivotal position. "The UAE is an important crossroads for business and, as a result, also for crime," Price said of the potential for fraud or abuse in the banking system. With the help of local officials, they routinely seek to investigate bank records and track financial transactions linked to the US.

When internet crime is traced back to the US, the agents are also able to help. Just months ago, a prominent UAE citizen received a cyber threat from a location in the US.

Local law enforcement officials contacted Price and Herbert, who enlisted agents in the US to conduct an investigation. The man was arrested, charged and is now facing imprisonment.

About working with local authorities, Price said: "I truly enjoy working with the Emiratis. They are professional and very gracious." There are, however, obstacles. According to Price, a federal law that regulates "international judicial cooperation" is often misinterpreted to be a roadblock to investigations. "There is not a timely, quick way for law enforcement response because of the bureaucratic process," he said.

Law enforcement mechanisms do not always translate across cultures and borders, Herbert said in a similar vein. "Things are run differently here than in the US, so we have to do things differently."

When FBI agents are on international assignment, they assume the title of Legal Attaché in their respective embassies. Price and Herbert are successors to three other agents since the Abu Dhabi office opened in December 2003. They cover both the UAE and Oman. In the region, the FBI also has agents posted in Afghanistan, Egypt, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Yemen.

During his tenure, former FBI director Louis Freeh pushed to expand the bureau's international presence. It now has offices in 62 countries. This worldwide network of agents is a necessary countermeasure against the growing nexus of international crime. "Just as there are no borders for crime and terrorism, there can be no borders for justice and the rule of law," current director Robert Mueller told the US Senate in March.

Progress

"Twenty years ago, the idea of regularly communicating with our law enforcement counterparts around the world was as foreign as the internet or the mobile phone. Today, advances in technology, travel and communication have broken down walls between countries, continents and individuals," Mueller added. Price and Herbert embody this prog-ress.

Mueller became the dir-ector one week prior to the September 11, 2001 attacks.

The FBI began as a special agent force in 1908 and received its current title in 1935. Since its genesis, the FBI has seen its share of success and failure. Though it has successfully foiled numerous plots, conspiracies and espionage attempts, it has been criticised for shoddy investigation tactics and ignoring intelligence reports that could have prevented past attacks. Regardless, it has survived a century of challenges.

- The writer is a journalist based in Abu Dhabi.

Source: GulfNews
on Wednesday, May 30, 2012
October 30, 2007: 12:33 PM EST

HYDERABAD, India, Oct. 30 /PRNewswire/ -- Satyam Computer Services Ltd. , a leading global consulting and IT services provider, announced today that it won the 2007 Pegasystems Partner Innovation Award in financial services. The announcement was made at PegaWORLD 2007, Pegasystems' annual conference, and one of the business process management (BPM) industry's flagship events.

Satyam won the esteemed award for its advanced Anti-Money Laundering (AML) solution, which enables financial institutions to intelligently track, manage and quickly resolve potentially fraudulent and criminal activity with greater speed and accuracy and to comply with stricter AML regulations. Satyam used Pegasystems' SmartBPM(R) Suite to create the new solution, which addresses a critical and underserved need in the market.

"Financial institutions now have an innovative way to fight fraud and financial crime, as well as stay in compliance with BSA/AML/KYCC statutes," said Anil Kumar, the Global Head of Satyam's Financial Services Business.

Integration among Satyam experts accelerated the solution's development and deployment.

"Satyam's business process management and banking experts leveraged Pegasystems' SmartBPM platform to rapidly deliver an advanced solution without additional and costly software development," said Joseph Lagioia, head of Satyam's Consulting and Enterprise Solutions Practice. "We are very proud and pleased to win this prestigious honor."

Satyam's AML solution optimizes a financial institution's existing transaction-monitoring systems-detecting suspicious activity such as the deposit of very large sums, multiple accounts for the same person, and suspicious names-while at the same time minimizing the number of false positives, which has been a nagging problem in the past. The solution also allows financial institutions to recognize suspicious transactions quickly, rather than waiting until the end of the day, which is the norm for institutions using case management systems.

"Satyam combines superior subject matter expertise in financial services with deep understanding of Pegasystems technology to deliver truly innovative business solutions in an accelerated fashion," said Douglas Kim, managing director of Global Alliances and Business Development for Pegasystems. "We're proud of our long-standing relationship with Satyam and are delighted to recognize them with this award."

About Satyam

Satyam , a leading global business and information technology services company, delivers consulting, systems integration, and outsourcing solutions to clients in 20 industries and 57 countries.

Satyam leverages deep industry and functional expertise, leading technology practices, and an advanced, global delivery model to help clients transform their highest-value business processes and improve their business performance. The company's 45,700* professionals excel in engineering and product development, supply chain management, client relationship management, business process quality, business intelligence, enterprise integration, and infrastructure management, among other key capabilities.

Satyam development and delivery centers in the US, Canada, Brazil, the UK, Hungary, Egypt, UAE, India, China, Malaysia, Singapore, and Australia serve 599* clients, 173 of which are Fortune Global 500 and Fortune US 500 corporations. For more information, see http://www.satyam.com.

*As of Sept. 30, 2007

Safe Harbor

This press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of section 27A of Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. The forward-looking statements contained herein are subject to certain risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those reflected in the forward- looking statements. Satyam undertakes no duty to update any forward-looking statements. For a discussion of the risks associated with our business, please see the discussions under the heading "Risk Factors" in our report on Form 6-K concerning the quarter ended June 30, 2006, furnished to the United States Securities Exchange Commission on July 28, 2006 and the other reports filed with the Securities Exchange Commission from time to time. These filings are available at http://www.sec.gov.

http://money.cnn.com/news/newsfeeds/articles/prnewswire/DCTU00430102007-1.htm
on Monday, May 28, 2012
The government has admitted that it is allowing hundreds of millions of dollars to be transferred to Hamas in Gaza, the watchdog organization Shurat Hadin charged on Thursday.

Organization head Nitzana Darshan-Leitner quoted from a letter she received from the legal adviser of the Prime Minister's Office that said, "The transfer of funds to the Palestinian Authority in the Gaza Strip takes place with the knowledge of the government of Israel for diplomatic reasons."

However, Mark Regev, a spokesman for the Prime Minister's Office, told The Jerusalem Post that the funds mentioned in the legal adviser's letter referred to the money from customs taxes belonging to the PA in accordance with the Paris Agreement of 1994.

According to the agreement, the customs tax for goods imported to the West Bank is collected by Israel at the ports and then delivered to the PA in Ramallah.

"Not a single penny of this money goes to the Hamas," said Regev. The money is used to pay PA employees working in the Gaza Strip, he added.

However, Shurat Hadin attorney Ro'i Kochavi said that his organization's allegations were not related to these funds but to other transfers by the Bank of Israel and the Postal Authority.

"The transfer of hundreds of millions [dollars' worth] of shekels in cash (bills and coins) to the Gaza Strip has continued since the Hamas takeover of Gaza last year," wrote Shurat Hadin. "The money is transferred in armored cars from banks in Judea and Samaria by the Postal Authority and others. Some of the money is used to replace bills that deteriorated [and could not be used] and some to launder money that the Hamas smuggles into the Gaza Strip from Iran via Egypt."

Kochavi told the Post that the Iranian money was delivered in large bills. The armored cars sent by banks with branches in Ramallah and Gaza bring Israeli shekels to the Gaza-Israel border, where they switch loads with armored cars from Gaza carrying the Iranian money, he said.

Kochavi charged that Hamas was using the shekels to pay their armed forces.

Meanwhile, the Iranian money is brought to the banks in the West Bank, where it is sold to the Bank of Israel in return for shekels, he said. The cycle then repeats itself.

In a letter to Kochavi, Merav Batzri, assistant to the legal adviser of the Bank of Israel, wrote that the bank did not know anything about the facts presented in Shurat Hadin's letter. However, it added that "the Bank of Israel also serves as a professional economic adviser to the government of Israel. In this context, it is involved with the relations between banks in Israel and those operating in the areas of the Palestinian Authority. Furthermore, the decision to transfer funds to the Gaza Strip is based on a wide basket of considerations aside from economic considerations, including political, security and others. These are the responsibility of the government rather than the bank."

Attorney Ronen Baharav wrote that "the Postal Bank Company, which provides services to the Postal Authority, is required from time to time to transfer money or cash checks on behalf of recipients living in the Gaza Strip. The bank's activities are carried out with the knowledge of the relevant authorities."

Darshan-Leitner wrote that she was considering petitioning the High Court of Justice, charging that the government was violating the Prohibition of Terrorist Funding Law and the Prohibition against Money Laundering Law.

Source: JPost
on Friday, May 18, 2012
Members of the anti-money laundering and anti-terrorist financing organization, the Middle East and North Africa Financial Action Task Force, or MENAFATF, approved Libya's membership application Tuesday, MENAFATF President Abdulrahim Al Awadi said.

"The plenary of 17 members approved the application of Libya to be a member and the application of the World Customs Organization to be an observer member," Al Awadi told reporters in Fujeirah, United Arab Emirates.

Libya will become the 18th member state of the organization, which was set up in November 2004 and includes Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Oman, Sudan, Iraq and Egypt. The U.S., U.K., France and Spain are observer members, as well as the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank. The U.A.E. currently holds the presidency.

The U.A.E., which is keen to expand membership, also proposed that Djbouti, Comoros Islands, Seychelles and Maldives become members. The proposal is still being studied by member states.

Al Awadi added that the taskforce will meet next in Bahrain, which takes over the presidency of the organization in May 2009.

He also said that the global credit crisis won't draw attention away from fighting money laundering and terrorist financing.

"Members reiterate the financial crisis should not affect progress and, on the contrary, will add resolve to progress," Al Awadi said.

Source: Zawya
on Tuesday, May 15, 2012
The U.S. government organized a workshop in Jordan to teach officials from the Arab countries how to detect and investigate the smuggling of money.

The U.S. has been working with Jordan and other Arab countries to ensure that banking institutions are subject to appropriate oversight and that they have effective programs in place to prevent money-laundering and terrorist financing.

Participants, including representatives from Jordan, Algeria, Egypt, Kuwait, Lebanon, Mauritania, Morocco, Oman, the Palestinian Authority, Qatar, Tunisia and Yemen, examined anti-money laundering standards used by the Financial Action Task Force, a Paris-based inter-government body set up in 1989 by the Group of Eight industrialized nations.

This week, U.S. federal prosecutors said two NY residents were indicted on charges of trying to smuggle $500,000 (euro323,000) from the U.S. to Jordan.

Authorities said a grand jury in Hartford, Connecticut returned an indictment charging 35-year-old Hassan Abuzaitoun and 33-year-old Mohammad Alazzam with conspiracy to commit money laundering and conspiracy to smuggle bulk cash from the United States. Both are naturalized U.S. citizens from Jordan residing in Yonkers, New York.

Jordanian authorities have often asserted that Jordan was free of money laundering because of its strict monetary regulations and practices.

In 2004, three different groups of families of suicide bombing victims in Israel filed suits in a Brooklyn, N.Y. federal court against Jordan's largest financial institution _ Arab Bank _ alleging that it moved donations from Saudi Arabia to militant Palestinian groups, including Hamas and Islamic Jihad.

The bank denied the allegation. It later decided to close down its New York branch saying it was pursuing its strategy to focus on operations in the Arab world and Europe.

http://www.amlosphere.com/america/legislation/us-workshop-in-jordan-builds-support-to-battle-money-laundering.html
on Thursday, February 9, 2012
It's important to note that this move doesn't represent some sort of amazingly fast investigation and crackdown; Operation Phish Phry was launched in 2007, not in response to this week's previous top security story, and there's no reason to believe any of the FBI's targets were involved in the password dump.
Still, security experts will have trouble finding fault with the end result.

American authorities arrested 33 of 53 people named in an indictment. Egyptian authorities apparently charged another 47. Together, this makes for the largest number of individuals ever charged in a cyber crime case.

The FBI also said in an official statement, "Operation Phish Phry marks the first joint cyber investigation between Egyptian law enforcement authorities and United States officials, which include the FBI, the United States Attorney's Office, and the Electronic Crimes Task Force in Los Angeles."

Anyway, the defendants, who allegedly stole something like $1.5 million from the accounts of Bank of America and Wells Fargo customers, all face charges of conspiracy to commit bank fraud and wire fraud, which could get them 20 years in prison.

Different ones should also have to answer questions about computer fraud, fraudulent bank transfers, and international money laundering, too, and the results of investigations on those fronts could extend their sentences by quite a lot.

It may be a long time before any of them (and particularly the ones who will have to deal with Egypt's legal system) get their hands on anything resembling a computer again, then.
Source: SecurityPro
on Friday, April 23, 2010
Riyadh, Cairo, Asharq Al-Awsat- In what represents a judicial precedent, the Egyptian Public Prosecution has charged a Saudi preacher who is allegedly a member of the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood organization with money laundering and raising funds abroad, along with 4 other Egyptians.

According to the details revealed by the Egyptian Public Prosecution, 4 Egyptians and 1 Saudi Arabian have been charged. The Public Prosecution did not reveal information about the Saudi citizen, who is Saudi Arabian preacher Awad Mohamed al-Qarni who the Egyptians previously accused of being a member of the outlawed organization a few months ago before dropping the charges. Saudi preacher Awad Mohamed al-Qarni is not to be confused with his namesake the more famous Saudi preacher Dr. Aaidh al-Qarni.

Egyptian Prosecutor General Abdel-Meguid Mahmoud yesterday issued the order to charge the 5 alleged members of the Muslim Brotherhood International organization with money laundering and raising funds abroad for an outlawed group, and for their case to be transferred to the Egyptian State Security Emergency Court.

The defendants are listed as; Assistant Secretary-General of the Egyptian Medical Syndicate Dr. Ashraf Abdel-Ghafer, as well as Islamic preacher Sheikh Abdul Hamid Ghoneim, Saudi Arabian preacher Awad Mohamed al-Qarni, Ibrahim Munir Mustafa, and Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Sabah Bureau De Change Dr. Osama Mohamed Suleiman. The latter four have been charged in absentia and are listed as fugitives.

This is the first time in Egyptian legal history that a Saudi preacher has been charged with financing the Muslim Brotherhood which is outlawed throughout Egypt.

Saudi preacher Awad al-Qarni told Asharq Al-Awsat that the charges made against him by the Egyptian Public Prosecution are "fabricated." He added "I emphatically and unequivocally stress that these accusations are completely unfounded, and I challenge the Egyptian security services to provide a single piece of evidence on the veracity of what they claim."

He said that the charges made against him are like the accusations previously made against him by the Egyptians a few months ago and which were dropped after just one week.

As for whether he intends to engage Egyptian lawyers to defend him at the Egyptian State Security Emergency Court, or whether he will use a lawyer provided by the Muslim Brotherhood, Saudi preacher Awad al-Qarni told Asharq Al-Awsat "firstly, with all respect to the Muslim Brotherhood movement and to all Islamist currents and trends in our region, I am not in anyway involved with their problems with the Egyptian government."

Asked whether this means he was denying affiliated to the Muslim Brotherhood, al-Qarni said "I announced this [denial] during the previous charge that was issued by the Egyptian regime [against me], and I challenge the Egyptian regime to prove that I have any connection with the Muslim Brotherhood."

However al-Qarni added "This is not contempt or distain towards the Muslim Brotherhood or any other children of the virtuous ummah, but we in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia have a specialty which is built upon applying Islamic Shariaa law on all aspects of life, therefore – unlike other Arab countries – we are not in need of an organized mechanism to return Islam to the lives of the ummah."

The trial of the accused by the Egyptian State Security Emergency Court is set to take place within the next few days, and under Egyptian Emergency law the results of this trial cannot be appealed.

The Egyptian Public Prosecution revealed that they accused 4 of the 5 suspects of providing financing of £4 million to the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood organization to finance its illegal activities in Egypt. The Public Prosecution also accused 2 of the 5 suspects of money laundering a sum of 2.8 million euros. The Public Prosecution alleges that Defendant No 4 sent several money transfers to the account of Defendant No 5, and that this money was later transferred into US dollars.

The details of the case date back to July 2009 when the Egyptian Intelligence Service discovered that an individual they were investigating for money laundering – Defendant No 5 – was in fact a member of the Muslim Brotherhood, and that he was laundering money for the outlawed group. The Public Prosecution claim that Defendant No 5 was receiving money from abroad, which he was laundering for the Muslim Brotherhood organization through various foreign investment projects in Egypt.

The Public Prosecution documents also reveal that on 4 June 2009, the Egyptian Security Services received notification from the unit dealing with money laundering that various suspicious money transfers amounting to 2.7 million euros had been made into a Lebanese bank account belonging to Defendant No 5.

Source: Asharq Alawsat
on Thursday, February 8, 2007
THE UN Office on Drugs and Crimes (UNODC) yesterday urged Qatar to review its anti-terror laws in view of the changes taking place in the world.

“Qatar’s anti-terror legislation was sufficient when it was issued in 2004. But with the world witnessing new developments, there is a need to review it,” Dr Iskandar Ghattas, an official of the UNODC said at the National Workshop on Combating Terrorism, being held in Doha.

He said the laws should be framed in such a way that they are able to meet the new threats posed by terrorists and criminals.

“Egypt is in the process of issuing an anti-terror legislation. France had an anti-terror law, but issued a new one in 2006,” he said.

The UNODC’s expert also urged members of the Gulf Co-operation Council to enhance judicial co-operation to help in extradition of criminals.

“I hope the European Union which has a very effective system in this regard can provide an inspiration to the GCC countries on extradition of criminals,” he said, adding legislations in the Arab countries are falling short of achieving the necessary level of judicial co-operation.

Nadim Saad Kiryakous of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), said no country in the world has fully complied with the conventions mentioned in the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), an inter-governmental body to promote policies to combat money laundering and terrorist financing.

“We are still at a very low level in terms of adopting the recommendation of the FATF. There is no country which can claim that it is in full compliance with the recommendations. A lot has been done but again a lot remains to be done in this regard,” Kiryakous said, and urged the international community to play a bigger role in helping settle disputes so that people stop expressing their opinions in a violent way.

Kiryakous said charity fund-raising should not be affected by the measures taken to combat terrorism financing. “Charity organisations should continue to prosper and work. Such measures should not have a negative impact on the charities,” he said.

He hoped that the international community can prevent charities being controlled by criminals or terrorists.
“The main challenge here is to apply these measures without encroaching on the rights of individuals and charities,” he added.

Terrorism prevention expert at the UNODC, Dirk Merckx, hailed Qatar’s stance on combating terrorism. “Qatar is on the right track. It has a modern anti-terror legislation. But there is a long way to go in this regard. There is no country in the world which can be described as fully compliant with the all the relevant UN conventions. This is the first workshop and others will follow. Our visit aims to make an assessment of the steps required in this regard,” he said.

http://www.gulf-times.com/site/topics/article.asp?cu_no=2&item_no=131747&version=1&template_id=36&parent_id=16

on Tuesday, January 30, 2007
Cairo, Asharq Al-Awsat- An Egyptian court released Khairat al-Shater, second Deputy of the Supreme Guide of Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood, who has been in Egyptian custody since December 2006 with charges of including being affiliated with an outlawed group and money laundering.

A legal source stated that Cairo Criminal Court decided to release al-Shater along with another 15 members of the group, but had also issued a ruling to have their assist frozen. It is widely believed that al-Shater is one of the major financers of the group.

Zahra'a al-Shater, daughter of Khairat al-Shater told Asharq Al Awsat that her father did not go back home after his release, and that the bank her family does business with had informed her a day earlier that all their accounts had been frozen including her mother's inheritance money.

http://aawsat.com/english/news.asp?section=1&id=7841
on Thursday, December 21, 2006
21.12.2006

CAIRO, December 21 (Itar-Tass) - Russia’s Federal Financial Monitoring Service (Rosfinmonitoring) and Egyptian department for fighting money laundering signed here on Thursday an interdepartmental agreement on combating money laundering. “Russia and Egypt are commonly engaged in fighting money laundering and financing of terrorism,” head of Rosfinmonitoring Viktor Zubkov who signed the document told Itar-Tass.

According to him, Egypt is the first Arab, Middle East and African state with which Russia has concluded such an agreement. As for the world scale, Egypt has become the 33rd country with which Russian financial intelligence has signed such a document. “We conclude this kind of agreements with states that really work within the framework of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) and Egmont Group – an association of financial intelligence of 101 countries,” Zubkov said. The official added that Egypt has a dominating position in the Middle East and North Africa and Russia is chairing the Eurasian Group on combating money laundering and financing of terrorism (EAG) that was founded on the pattern of FATF.

The signed agreement develops agreements reached during Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak’s visit to Moscow in November this year. “The Egyptian side is greatly interested in developing cooperation with us. The main thing in the agreement is that we begin a full-fledged information exchange,” the Russian financial intelligence head stated. “Through Egypt, through the headquarters of the League of Arab States (LAS) we will be able to settle issues of coordination between the EAG and Middle East organisation for fighting money laundering and counteracting terrorism financing,” Zubkov emphasised.

http://www.tass.ru/eng/level2.html?NewsID=11103548&PageNum=0
on Wednesday, December 20, 2006
The Amman-based Arab Bank on Wednesday denied reports that the Palestinian ruling Hamas group had deposited 35 million dollars at one of its branches in Egypt.

"Hamas has no accounts at any of the Arab Bank branches, be they inside or outside the Palestinian territories," the Arab Bank said in a statement.

Palestinian Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh was permitted by the Israeli authorities to return to the Gaza Strip after a regional tour on Friday on the condition that he left behind 35 million dollars of donations he collected during his trip.

According to Arab media, the amount was deposited earlier this week at one of the Arab Bank branches in Egypt.

"The Arab Bank operates in a transparent manner and abides by the rules of the respective central banks and supervision bodies," the statement said.

The Arab Bank, one of the Arab world's largest establishments, managed to evade two lawsuits that were filed against its branches in New York two years ago by relatives of people who were killed in suicide bombings carried out by Hamas activists in Israel.

The bank then denied charges that it acted as a channel for laundering and transferring donations to the hard-line movement.

With this in the background, Jordanian and other Arab Banks so far refused to transfer funds to any of the Palestinian factions in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip to avoid sanctions by the United States and other countries which halted aid to the Palestinian Authority after a Hamas-led administration took up responsibilities in March.

© 2006 DPA

http://www.playfuls.com/news_10_5750-Arab-Bank-Says-Hamas-Has-No-Accounts-At-Any-Of-Its-Branches.html
on Sunday, December 10, 2006
The Associated Press
Sunday, December 10, 2006
AMMAN, Jordan


Jordanian Prime Minister Marouf al-Bakhit on Sunday urged stepped up international efforts to combat corruption, saying it had reached unprecedented levels and played a significant role in global terrorism.

"Corruption of its various sorts has a strong link to organized crime, including drugs, human trafficking, terrorism, arms smuggling, illegal immigration and the misuse of authority, al-Bakhit said.

"Therefore, international cooperation, experience-sharing, information exchange and consolidating technical assistance between countries, international organizations and civil society institutions is highly significant and a human duty," he asserted.

Al-Bakhit said global corruption reached "unprecedented levels." Quoting World Bank figures, he said bribery is estimated at US$1 trillion (€750 million) each year.

"The money spent on bribery is 10 times the international assistance available for development, which makes us realize the seriousness and gravity of the crime of corruption.

Al-Bakhit made the remarks at the opening of a four-day U.N.-sponsored anti-corruption conference on the Jordanian shores of the Dead Sea.

Some 500 participants from 125 countries are reviewing the U.N. Convention Against Corruption, the first legally binding international anti-corruption tool, which came into force on Dec. 14, 2005.

So far, 140 countries have signed the convention and 80 have ratified it to become full-fledged parties.

It addresses corruption in both the public and private sectors and requires countries to criminalize money laundering, bribery, embezzlement of public funds, and obstruction of justice.

Participants include government ministers, civil society representatives and the private sector, who are examining ways to enforce compliance with the convention, asset recovery and technical assistance to build national capacity to combat corruption.

They are also seeking to strengthen legal cooperation between countries in gathering evidence for use in trials and extradition proceedings are also under discussion.

Conference host Jordan, which ratified the convention on Feb. 24, 2005, is among seven Arab countries that are party to the convention, including Egypt, Kuwait, Yemen, Djibouti, Libya and Algeria.

Last Monday, Jordan's ruler, King Abdullah II, issued a royal decree approving the country's anti-corruption commission law, endorsed by parliament in September. It establishes an official body in Jordan entrusted with combating public sector corruption in line with the U.N. convention.

The commission is expected to have a free mandate to pursue current and former officials who are suspected of being involved in corruption.

http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2006/12/10/africa/ME_GEN_Jordan_U.N._Anti_Corruption.php