LISBON,
Portugal
Portugal’s
central bank is carrying out an inspection of small local lender Eurobic, in
which Angolan billionaire and former first daughter Isabel dos Santos is the
main shareholder, to assess its procedures.
Isabel Dos Santos, daughter of Angolan former President and Africa's richest woman, sits for a portrait during a Reuters interview in London, Britain, January 9, 2020 |
Responding to questions from Reuters, the unlisted
bank said on Thursday it was complying with all requirements to prevent illegal
transactions and that it saw the inspection as “part of the normal supervision
process” in the banking sector.
It also noted that the inspection began in late
November, before Angolan authorities froze dos Santos’ assets in the African
country in late December.
The asset freeze followed allegations by
prosecutors that dos Santos and her husband, who have denied any wrongdoing,
had steered payments of more than $1 billion from state companies Sonangol and
Sodiam to firms in which they held stakes.
One Portuguese financial sector source close to the
process told Reuters an on-site inspection was ongoing at Eurobic and there was
no estimated end date yet.
“In September 2019, well before the referred asset
freeze, the Bank of Portugal told us it was going to carry out an inspection of
mechanisms of prevention and control of money-laundering and financing of
terrorism, which began in late November,” Eurobic said in written replies.
Dos Santos, who is called “Africa’s wealthiest
woman” and also nicknamed “the Princess” in Angola after amassing a fortune
estimated at more than $2 billion during her father Jose Eduardo’s decades-long
presidency, has called the asset freeze a “witch hunt”.
In Portugal, she holds
significant stakes in several important firms, including telecoms company NOS (NOS.LS),
engineering company Efacec, and oil firm Galp Energia (GALP.LS).
A spokesman for dos Santos said she was “a
shareholder in Eurobic, who does not follow the day-to-day management of the
bank and is not aware of any new inspection”.
A spokesman for the Bank of Portugal declined to
comment on Thursday but earlier this month, the financial authority said it was
evaluating dos Santos’ suitability as a shareholder in Portuguese banks..
Eurobic made no specific reference to dos Santos,
who holds a 42.5% stake in the bank indirectly via two entities and does not
sit on the board.
The bank had assets worth 7.5 billion euros in
2018, with deposits of 5.7 billion euros and loans of 4.9 billion.
It said it acted “in rigorous respect of the
legislation concerning transactions with related parties - shareholders,
related entities, family members, etc - and politically-exposed persons,
subjecting them to greater scrutiny”.
The Bank of Portugal also investigated Eurobic in
2015. At the time the central bank concluded, according to documents seen by
Reuters, that “the inherent risk (of illegal transactions) is considered as
high” due to its shareholders’ close links to Angola, while citing a Transparency
International report that listed the country among the world’s most corrupt.
According to the latest such report in 2018, Angola
ranked 165 out of 180 countries, measured from least corrupt to most.
The central bank also, in 2015, noted that Eurobic’s
clients included various foreign, mainly Angolan, politically-exposed persons -
a loose definition used by financial regulators to identify people holding
prominent functions that can be abused for the purpose of laundering illicit
funds, corruption or bribery.
It also noted at the time that some of Eurobic’s
clients often made transactions involving large sums in cash.
Eurobic said it had made “significant investment in
the prevention of money-laundering or financing of terrorism” since receiving
central bank instructions in 2016, “namely reinforcing its personnel and their
functions” among other activities. It added that the central bank has been
monitoring its progress. - Reuters
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