NEW YORK, USA
Mozambique’s former finance minister pleaded not guilty in a U.S. federal court in New York on Thursday in connection with a $2 billion corruption and money laundering scandal that prosecutors said defrauded American investors and threatened to further destabilize the economy of one of the world’s poorest countries.
Manuel Chang served as finance
minister from 2005 to 2015 for Mozambique, a country of 31 million on Africa’s
southern coast on the Indian Ocean. He was ordered detained until at least
October, when his attorneys argue for a dismissal of his case.
Chang is accused of receiving
bribes of up to $18 million during a scheme that secured loans for Mozambican
state-owned companies from foreign banks and financiers for maritime projects.
The money was looted through kickbacks and other corrupt dealings, according to
U.S. prosecutors.
Until his extradition to the
United States Wednesday, Chang had been held in South Africa after being
arrested in Johannesburg in 2018 on a U.S. warrant.
“He is relieved to be here,”
his lawyer, Adam Ford, said after the arraignment in U.S. District Court in
Brooklyn.
He had
fought his extradition to the U.S., and the Mozambican government’s own
attempts to have Chang face trial in Mozambique had been dismissed by several
South African courts. Some groups opposed his return to his own country because
of concerns that he would likely be treated leniently.
In a letter a month ago to
U.S. District Judge Nicholas Garaufis, one of Chang’s attorneys sought to have
the case dismissed, asserting that Chang’s right to a speedy trial had been
violated.
Ford has called the charges
“meritless” and asserted that Chang would be acquitted — like another key
figure in the alleged scheme who was acquitted by a U.S. jury in 2019.
The judge raised that point in
court Thursday, but was persuaded by the prosecution’s suggestion that another
jury might see things differently.
In 2019, a federal jury
acquitted co-defendant Jean Boustani, a Lebanese national who worked for a
Middle Eastern shipbuilding company, who was accused by American authorities of
fraud related to $200 million in bribes and kickbacks as part of the broader
scheme.
Much of Thursday’s hearing
focused on whether Chang should be released on bail. The judge, citing the
amount of money involved and the gravity of the charges, agreed with
prosecutors that he could be a flight risk.
During the hearing an attorney
for the U.S. government, Hiral Mehta, provided a preview of the evidence that
could be introduced during a trial, including emails, spreadsheets, bank
records and other financial documents.
The scandal centers on loans
totaling $2 billion that were supposed to go toward purchasing fishing vessels
and naval patrol boats to bolster Mozambique’s fishing industry. But
prosecutors say the investments never happened.
The scandal caused a financial
crisis in Mozambique when the International Monetary Fund withdrew its support
for the country after the so-called “hidden debts” were revealed in 2016.
In 2021, Swiss bank Credit
Suisse agreed to pay at least $475 million to British and American authorities
to settle bribery and kickback allegations stemming from their involvement with
the corrupt loans.
At least 10 people have
already been convicted and sentenced to prison by a Mozambican court over the
scandal, including Ndambi Guebuza, the son of former Mozambican president
Armando Guebuza. He was sentenced to 12 years in prison for receiving up to $33
million from the corrupt deal.
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