Tag Archives: corruption

Former Kyrgyz customs chief extradited from Azerbaijan

DEC. 28 (The Conway Bulletin) — Azerbaijani authorities extradited Adamkul Junusov, Kyrgyzstan’s former customs chief, to Bishkek where he has been charged with corruption and abuse of power. Mr Junusov, who was customs chief from 2013-16, was detained in Baku on Dec. 5. He is just the latest former high-ranking official under ex Kyrgyz president Almazbek Atambayev to be arrested and charged with corruption. Kyrgyz officials accuse him of stealing $2.1m.
END

>>This story was first published in issue 396 of The Conway Bulletin on Jan. 11 2019

TBC Bank under investigation

TBILISI/JAN. 9 (The Conway Bulletin) — London-listed TBC Bank, Georgia’s largest retail bank, said that the Georgian Central Bank had investigated transactions between two of its units in 2007 and 2008.

The transactions involved TBC Bank’s chairman Mamuka Khazaradze and Badri Japaridze, the deputy chairman, TBC Bank said in its statement without detailing the allegations.

“The National Bank of Georgia has issued a fine of about 1m lari ($375,000) and, at this stage, it is unclear whether NBG will seek to impose additional sanctions,” TBC Bank said in a statement.

“TBC has already challenged this fine in the courts in Georgia and the court has issued an injunction suspending payment of the fine.”

It also added that the Georgian Prosecutor-General had opened an investigation linked to the transactions.

TBC Bank has said that it denies the unnamed allegations.
END

>>This story was first published in issue 396 of The Conway Bulletin on Jan. 11 2019

Georgia’s TBC Bank starts building new HQ

TBILISI/DEC. 20 (The Conway Bulletin) – TBC Bank, one of two Georgian high street banks listed on the London Stock Exchange, started building a new $70m headquarters in a controversial site in countryside near Tbilisi.

If the building work goes to plan, the glass and steel complex set in the Lisi Lake recreational area will open in 2026 and will be the largest corporate office in the region, an expression of confidence and intent by TBC.

In a statement, TBC emphasis that its new headquarters will provide a light and flexible workspace for 2,000 workers.

“We are creating a completely new standard, which involves the use of the best technologies and at the same time combining elements of traditional Georgian architecture in a completely modern building,” said Badri Japaridze, deputy chairman of TBC.

The headquarters is also being designed to incorporate laboratories for employees to experiment on new ideas and concepts.

But the project is not without its controversies. Set in the Lisi Lakes area, transparency campaigners have accused TBC’s founders of buying the land on the cheap, in a 2007 deal that left the Georgian state, and ordinary people, short-changed.

In a report published three years ago, the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP), an activist group based in Berlin, said that TBC chairman Mamuka Khazaradze had bought the 354 hectare site from the government for $55m, instead of the original $182m asking price.

The new deal also dropped various conditions to improve the ecology of the area and also to improve access to the Lisi Lake area.

“Instead of being required to spend US$ 30 million on improvements, the only obligation in the new contracts is to build housing,” the OCCRP said in its report.
Mr Khazaradze, ranked as the second wealthiest person living in Georgia, has denied any wrongdoing.

Since buying the land, Lisi Lake Development and other companies linked to Mr Khazaradze have built housing, business centres on the site and also a university – the American Academy.

ENDS

>>This story was first published in issue 395 of The Conway Bulletin on Dec. 23 2018

Aliyeva sisters linked to London property deal

DEC. 20 (The Conway Bulletin) – Leyla and Arzu Aliyeva, the two daughters of Azerbaijani president Ilham Aliyev, tried to buy a $72m London property in 2015 through a mechanism that suggested there was a “significant money laundering risk”, a court in London said. The potential Knightsbridge property deal, which never materialised, came to light during the tribunal of the Aliyevas’ lawyer Khalid Sharif for failing to conduct proper money laundering checks.

ENDS

>>This story was first published in issue 395 of The Conway Bulletin on Dec. 23 2018

Karimova has not been freed, says Uzbek Prosecutor

OCT. 3 (The Conway Bulletin) – Uzbekistan’s Prosecutor-General denied reports that Gulnara Karimova, the eldest daughter of former Uzbek leader Islam Karimov, had been released from prison. Once one of the most powerful people in Uzbekistan, Karimova was arrested in 2014 and sent to prison for various financial crimes. Her father died in 2016. In Britain, the Serious Fraud Squad said that it had started proceedings to confiscate Karimova’s property and assets as they are part of a corruption case.

ENDS

>>This story was first published in issue 388 of The Conway Bulletin on Oct. 17 2018

Azerbaijani jailed banker’s wife suspected of money laundering

OCT. 10 (The Conway Bulletin) – A woman under investigation in Britain’s first case involving an Unexplained Wealth Order (UWO) for spending $21m at the London department store Harrods, buying a nearby townhouse and also a golf course outside London was named as Azerbaijani Zamira Hajiyeva. Ms Hajiyeva is the wife of Jahangir Hajiyev, the former chairman of International Bank of Azerbaijan who was jailed in 2016 for fraud.

ENDS

>>This story was first published in issue 388 of The Conway Bulletin on Oct. 17 2018

Jeenbekov appoints new foreign minister in Kyrgyzstan

OCT. 17 (The Conway Bulletin) – Kyrgyz president Sooronbai Jeenbekov appointed Chyngyz Aidarbekov as his new foreign minister, a replacement for Erlan Abdyldaev who had resigned five days earlier after a series of corruption scandals. Mr Abdyldaev denied corruption allegations that Kyrgyzstan’s ambassador to South Korea, Kylychbek Sultan, had levied at him. The row between Mr Abdyldaev and Mr Sultan came less than a month after a Kyrgyz deputy minister was sacked for being drunk and disorderly on a flight back from Seoul.

ENDS

>>This story was first published in issue 388 of The Conway Bulletin on Oct. 17 2018

Corruption allegations made against Georgian officials

SEPT. 26 (The Conway Bulletin) – Eleven civil society groups in Georgia released a statement expressing concern about potential corruption by public officials. The trigger for their statement was several leaked audio conversations featuring businessmen and officials. The authenticity of the leaked phone conversations has not been validated and the ruling Georgian Dream coalition has denied the accusations.
ENDS
>>This story was published in issue 387 of The Conway Bulletin on Oct. 1 2018

Armenian intelligence chiefs questioned

SEPT. 27 (The Conway Bulletin) – Prosecutors in Armenia have interviewed two senior intelligence chiefs over a leaked phone call that appeared to show them colluding with other government departments over the detention of former President Robert Kocharyan in July, media reported. Mr Kocharyan was detained, and then released, for his role in the shooting dead of anti-government protesters after elections in 2008.
-ENDS-
>>This story was published in issue 387 of The Conway Bulletin on Oct. 1 2018

Three prosecutors sacked in Kazakhstan

JAN. 31 (The Conway Bulletin) – Kazakhstan appears to be having a clear out within the ranks of its legal system after the sacking of three senior prosecutors. Almaty city prosecutor, Gabit Mirazov, and the deputy prosecutors of the Aktyubinsk region, Daniyar Syzdykov, and South-Kazakhstan oblast, Abil Kozhakhmetov, were sacked for various misdemeanours.

ENDS

>>This story was first published in issue 360 of The Conway Bulletin