Lebanese PM defends ‘integrity’ after French money laundering complaint

Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati poses during a photo session at his residence in downtown Beirut. (AFP/File)
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Updated 04 April 2024
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Lebanese PM defends ‘integrity’ after French money laundering complaint

  • The two associations accuse him and his brother of having likely “acquired various properties in France and abroad

PARIS: Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati on Wednesday defended his “integrity” and “transparent” assets, following a complaint filed in France accusing him of money laundering and other offenses.
Two associations filed a complaint against Mikati with France’s financial prosecutor’s office, accusing him of fraudulently building up assets in France and other countries, a source close to the case told AFP on Wednesday.
The complains said that the Lebanese public consider Mikati, his brother Taha and their entourage as “the embodiment... of the clientelism and conflict of interest that have led Lebanon to its downfall.”
In a statement sent to AFP and other media, Mikati said: “We strongly reaffirm that the source of our family wealth is entirely transparent, legitimate, and in full compliance with the law.”
The complaint lodged by the CVPFCL financial crimes victim’s collective of Lebanon, and the Sherpa anti-corruption association, accuses Mikati of money laundering, concealment or complicity, and criminal conspiracy as part of an organized gang.
Mikati made his fortune in telecoms and in June 2022 became prime minister of Lebanon for the third time.
The two associations accuse him and his brother of having likely “acquired various properties in France and abroad, via multiple structures and through extremely large financial transfers.”
Those include properties in Monaco and Saint Jean-Cap-Ferrat, on France’s Mediterranean coast; a 79-meter yacht “acquired for 100 million dollars“; and two Falcon jets, valued at around 95 million dollars.
Taha Mikati also reportedly owns a yacht worth $125 million.
According to Forbes magazine, the two brothers are worth $2.8 billion, making them among the richest people in Lebanon.
In his statement, Mikati insisted that no family member nor business “has been found guilty by any court, whether in Lebanon or anywhere else in the world.”
The statement added that “attempts to discredit” the family were “unfounded and often politically-motivated.”
It said that a Beirut judge in February 2022 and a Monaco court in August 2023 had dismissed charges against the family.
But the plaintiffs claimed that “since the mid-1990s, corruption has been intimately linked to the functioning of the state,” which the brothers have benefitted from.
“Mikati’s systemic use of offshore accounts and tax havens” and the “culture of corruption and conflicts of interest” that he embodies, make him and his family “widely suspected of large scale laundering (and) tax fraud over many years,” added the plaintiffs’ lawyers William Bourdon and Vincent Brengarth.
Several of the Mikati brothers’ children are suspected of receiving some of the allegedly laundered money.
Sherpa previously lodged a complaint against Riad Salame, the former governor of Lebanon’s central bank, who has faced a French international arrest warrant since May 2023.


Pentagon announces $8.6 billion Boeing contract for F-15 jets for Israel

Updated 30 min 26 sec ago
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Pentagon announces $8.6 billion Boeing contract for F-15 jets for Israel

  • Contract work will be performed in St. Louis, and was expected to be complete by Dec. 31, 2035, the Pentagon said in ‌a statement

WASHINGTON: Boeing ​was given an $8.6 billion contract for the F-15 Israel Program, the Pentagon said on Monday, after US President Donald Trump met Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Florida.
“This ‌contract provides for ‌the design, ‌integration, instrumentation, ⁠test, ​production, ‌and delivery of 25 new F-15IA aircraft for the Israeli Air Force with an option for an additional 25 F-15IA aircraft,” the Pentagon said.
The Pentagon said ⁠the contract involved foreign military sales ‌to Israel. The US ‍has long ‍been by far the ‍largest arms supplier to its closest Middle East ally.
Pro-Palestinian and anti-war protesters around the US had demanded an end ​to Washington’s military support for Israel due to its devastating ⁠assault on Gaza but those demands have not been met in the administrations of President Donald Trump and former President Joe Biden.
Contract work will be performed in St. Louis, and was expected to be complete by Dec. 31, 2035, the Pentagon said in ‌a statement.