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Beirut bombshell
The assassination of a former Prime Minister may have been linked to the collapse of Lebanon's Bank al-Madina.

By Mitchell Prothero, FORTUNE
May 4, 2006: 11:30 AM EDT


(FORTUNE Magazine) - Last year, when Syrian intelligence operatives were implicated in the assassination of former Lebanese Prime
Minister Rafik Hariri, their motive seemed clear: to neutralize a political opponent of Syria's three-decade occupation of Lebanon.
But United Nations investigators and other sources have told FORTUNE there may have been an additional reason for the hit. The
February 2005 car bombing in Beirut, the sources say, may have been partly intended to cover up a corruption and bank fraud scandal
that siphoned hundreds of millions of dollars to top Syrian and Lebanese officials.
Bank documents, court filings, and interviews with investigators and other sources show that some of the officials were deeply involved
from the late 1990s until early 2003 in a kickback scheme that supplied them with cash, real estate, cars, and jewelry in exchange for
protecting and facilitating a multibillion-dollar money laundering operation at Lebanon's Bank al-Madina that allowed terrorist
organizations, peddlers of West African "blood diamonds," Saddam Hussein, and Russian gangsters to hide income and convert hot
money into legitimate bank accounts around the world.
Despite efforts to cover up the details surrounding the bank's collapse in early 2003, these sources say, the Syrian and Lebanese
officials allegedly involved in the fraud feared that Hariri could return to power and reveal their role in one of the biggest illegal banking
operations in the Middle East since the Bank of Credit & Commerce International scandal in the early 1990s.
"Was the scandal part of the reason Hariri was killed?" asks Marwan Hamade, Lebanon's Minister of Telecommunications and a Hariri
confidant who was himself the target of a car-bomb assassination attempt. "Absolutely. It was certainly one of the cumulative reasons.
If he had been reelected, Hariri would have reopened the file, which we know goes directly to [Syrian President Bashar] Assad through
the [Lebanese] presidential palace in Baabda."
UN investigators looking into Hariri's death, led by German prosecutor Detlev Mehlis, became interested in the link to al-Madina on the
suspicion that money stolen from the bank helped fund the plot, says a Lebanese security source who helped investigate the bank's
collapse and later worked with the UN team. After reviewing some of the banking records of suspects in both Syria and Lebanon, says
the source, who asked not to be identified as he isn't authorized to talk about the matter, the UN team started looking into whether at
least some of the plotters were motivated by a desire to obscure their roles in the al- Madina affair.
"It goes all the way to the top people in Syria," the source says. Mehlis's reports on the assassination make reference to financial fraud
as a possible motive.
"Fraud, corruption, and money laundering could have been motives for individuals to participate in the operation that ended with the
assassination of Mr. Hariri," Mehlis wrote last December in his second report, referring specifically to the collapse of al-Madina.
Mehlis, who would not be interviewed, also mentioned in his report a taped conversation in which General Rustom Ghazali, Syria's top
military official in Lebanon, accused Hariri of discussing Syrian corruption in a newspaper interview, apparently in violation of an
agreement to remain quiet on the matter.
In late April, noting UN findings, President George W. Bush ordered a freeze on assets held in the U.S. by anyone involved in the
assassination, though the order did not cite names.
As part of the power struggle that ensued after Assad extended the term of Lebanese President and Syrian ally Émile Lahoud in 2004,
Hariri resigned as Prime Minister with the intention of running for Parliament on an anti-Syrian platform. Hariri confidants say that, once
returned to power, he planned to reopen the investigation into the bank's collapse. The case file and a trove of supporting documents
were sealed in the vault of Lebanon's Central Bank in 2003 after threats by Ghazali, who appears to have made millions of dollars from
the scheme himself.
The Syrian occupation of Lebanon from 1976 to 2005 has long been viewed as a geopolitical move designed to stabilize its smaller
neighbor after decades of civil war and create a bargaining chip in the Arab-Israeli conflict. But over time, the occupation turned into a
moneymaking operation for Syrian elites and their Lebanese allies.
"When the Syrians came to Lebanon," says Adnan Araki, a former Lebanese member of Parliament and Syrian loyalist, "they wanted
the Golan Heights back and considered Lebanon and Hezbollah something to bargain with. We had to teach them how to steal."
Investigators looking into the looting at Bank al-Madina got a break in March, when Brazilian police arrested Rana Koleilat, al-Madina's
former executive secretary. Koleilat, who jumped bail in Lebanon last year and eluded an international manhunt, is believed to have
played a key role in the bank scandal.
She is alleged in lawsuits brought by the bank's owners to have used false withdrawals and bogus loans to enrich her family and pay
off authorities. Even as al-Madina failed, she is said by investigators to have extracted millions of dollars from owner Adnan Abou
Ayyash, a construction magnate who lives in Saudi Arabia, through a series of wire transfers and check exchanges.
Koleilat denied the charges after her capture and said that the bank's owners had authorized all withdrawals and that Ghazali had
blackmailed her into paying him for protection.
When the dust settled in the summer of 2003, after depositors were paid and assets liquidated, the Abou Ayyash family found itself
about $1.5 billion poorer, a stunning turn of events for a Lebanese family that controlled a vast business empire.
But as Koleilat and the Abou Ayyash brothers sued and countersued, and the Central Bank grabbed whatever money was left to pay
depositors, it became clear that no investigation would be forthcoming. The money was gone, and only questions remained, questions
whose answers were locked away in a vault in the Central Bank.
In an interview last year, Central Bank governor Riad Salameh didn't deny reports that Ghazali had threatened him into closing the
investigation. The general's family, records produced by the bank appear to show, got more than $32 million from al-Madina via
transfers approved by Koleilat. But with a pro-Syrian Parliament and Justice Minister in place, then-Prime Minister Hariri was unable to
force an investigation beyond the initial 2003 fraud claims.
It is only recently, a year after the departure of Syrian troops, that the bank files have been transferred to the Ministry of Justice for a
proper investigation into how the money was stolen and who benefited from the bribes. Just a handful of bank documents have
emerged, but they detail an impressive pattern of corruption and fraud on the part of Syrian political and security officials and their
Lebanese allies.
Critical evidence of the extent of the money-laundering operation was unintentionally revealed during an investigation by the U.S.
Federal Bureau of Investigation to ensnare an arms dealer with ties to the Islamic resistance movement Hezbollah, based in Lebanon,
which the U.S. and several other governments consider a terrorist organization.
In 2004, U.S. prosecutors charged Naji Antoine Abi Khalil with attempting to purchase and ship night-vision goggles and other military
equipment from the U.S. to Hezbollah. Khalil's ties to al-Madina's money-laundering operations came to light when he bragged to
agents and informants that he traveled the world picking up cash to be delivered to the bank on behalf of Hezbollah and Russian
mobsters.
According to court papers, Khalil, who has since pleaded guilty, accepted $100,000 to launder from agents as part of a sting and told
them the single biggest delivery he had made to the bank was $160 million in cash.
But those amounts pale when compared to the piles of cash laundered by Iraqi officials and their partners in illegally gaming the UN's
oil-for-food program. Designed for humanitarian reasons to allow Iraq to sell oil through vouchers that could be used to purchase food
and medicine, the program became a hotbed of corruption that Saddam and his loyalists used to earn illegal money. By the late 1990s,
proceeds flooded the Middle East as favored allies of the regime received coupons good for oil purchases at lower-than-market prices.
Investigations into the program found rampant corruption on the part of UN officials, Middle Eastern government officials, and oil
companies. The son of Lebanese President Lahoud was implicated, as were other prominent Lebanese and Syrian officials and
businessmen. And al-Madina served as a place for them to hide the proceeds.
Several sources, including one alleged conspirator in the oil-for-food scandal, who refuses to let his name be used for legal and safety
reasons, put the amount transferred and laundered through al-Madina at more than $1 billion, with a 25 percent commission going to
Syrian officials and their Lebanese allies. The source says that among the recipients of this money were Bashar Assad's brother
Maher and the head of military intelligence in Lebanon at the time, Ghazi Kanaan. (Kanaan committed suicide last October after Mehlis
questioned him about the plot to kill Hariri.)
To protect this operation, Koleilat had developed a network of graft that shocked even a Lebanese society comfortable with
questionable business dealings. She threw dinners where guests received Rolex watches, and she gave luxury cars to friends and
officials. The graft was so widespread that one security official described the parking lot of his office during that era as a "Mercedes
dealership."
Some bank records point to 155 pieces of real estate - villas, apartments, hotels, and condos - purchased or distributed by Koleilat and
her brothers. The Koleilats also had five luxury yachts and as many as 194 cars and motorcycles, not including the gifts to friends,
associates, and greedy officials.
Koleilat and the al-Madina plotters needed protection and sought out high-level officials who could help them, says a former employee
of the Koleilat family who witnessed many of their dealings.
The source, who requested anonymity because the matter is still considered dangerous to discuss in Lebanon, says one of those was
Jamil Sayeed, a former director of Lebanese internal security, since arrested on suspicion of plotting Hariri's murder. (Sayeed refused
to comment.)
"Rustom Ghazali would receive money, cars, jewels, and hunting trips," the source says. "People used to come and wait in the office.
The big shots would get checks; the lower people, like generals and officers, would get cash. This situation went much higher than
Ghazali. It was a way for Maher Assad and others to profit from Lebanon and from the Iraq factor."
Several Syrian officials mentioned in the Mehlis reports can be tied to money from al-Madina by documents supplied to FORTUNE by
the bank's owners. Ghazali's three brothers were issued four ATM cards linked to a fake account with a $2,000 daily limit for
withdrawals, which they made each day from December 2002 to January 2003, according to one document. One of the four cards had a
total yearly cash withdrawal of $8 million.
Ghazali's brother Mohammed also received a money transfer for $1,091,000 from the bank on Jan. 20, 2003. Investigators and lawyers
for the bank's owners say that during these final months, Ghazali and other top officials decided that the bank's failure was inevitable
and acted quickly to drain the remaining monies. One bank employee says that he witnessed Rustom Ghazali demanding a $300,000
payment just after the bank had been put under Central Bank management, a payment approved by regulators.
Among the 155 suspicious real estate transactions flagged by investigators is the transfer of an apartment valued at $2.5 million from
the Koleilat family to a friend of Maher Assad's office manager - a transfer the bank's lawyers say they believe was intended to put it
under Maher Assad's control. Lebanese political and security officials say that the sealed documents show far more money and
property transferred to Maher.
"The entire file on Madina is now at the Ministry of Justice, except for the key parts that implicate Maher Assad, which are still being held
in the Central Bank, because people are afraid of being killed over it," says Hamade, the Telecommunications Minister. "While there is
not the same level of threats, the Syrian presence remains, and judges are very cautious about this case." (Efforts to reach Maher
Assad and the Ghazalis for comment through several Syrian government agencies were unsuccessful.)
Other documents show transfers or transactions made by the bank to the benefit of Lahoud's son - allegations he refused to comment
on - and to Lebanese security officials, including the four generals arrested last year on suspicion of participating in the plot to kill Hariri.
Current Finance Minister Jihad Azour, a friend of Hariri's, insists that only today, with Syrian troops out of the country, can Lebanon
commit to a full investigation. And he believes fear of such an investigation drove some of the murderers.
"The risk of reopening the file could have led to this murder," Azour says. "Al-Madina reached the biggest people in Lebanon and Syria."
Azour says Hariri wanted to pursue an investigation into al-Madina and other cases of corruption and would have gone forward, even
knowing the danger.
"Hariri wanted this file to reach its conclusion," Azour says. "He was concerned about the scandal's ramifications. It has a very negative
impact on the status of the Lebanese banking system. And it's important that the case be treated in an extreme way to fix this
perception."

http://money.cnn.com/2006/05/01/news/international/lebanon_fortune_051506/index.htm
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