Forums Sénégalais
 Accueil S'inscrire Blogs Photos Radio et Télé Calendrier Recherche Marquer les forums comme lus FAQ


Politique Discutons ici des sujets politiques, de candidats politiques, d'élections, etc...

Réponse
 
LinkBack Outils de la discussion Modes d'affichage
  #1 (permalink)  
Vieux 20/02/2008, 22h35
Avatar de aventurier
aventurier aventurier est déconnecté
Senior Member
 
Date d'inscription: octobre 2007
Messages: 310
aventurier is on a distinguished road
Par défaut Ferraris to flats, an African story

Ferraris to flats, an African story

The list is an impressive one. A stylish manor worth $21 million, numerous prestige flats and countless luxury cars – all paid for in cash and all listed in the names of five African heads of state or their families.

The details of the acquisitions were part of a dossier created for a French investigating magistrate that Al Jazeera was granted access to.

The documents were gathered by police after a group of NGOs launched an anti-corruption case against Omar Bongo, Denis Sassou Nguesso, Blaise Compaore, Eduardo dos Santos and Teodoro Obiang – the presidents of Gabon, Congo Brazzaville, Burkina Faso, Angola and Equatorial Guinea.

The civil suit has already been dismissed once by French courts, but the activists stand by their allegations that a list of multi-million dollar French properties and luxury cars were bought by the African heads of state.

Among the documents are property titles, cheques, transfer orders and bills sent by luxury car dealers showing an extremely expensive lifestyle that seems suspicious to investigators and anti-corruption activists.

There is a copy of a cheque of 390,000 euro for a car delivered to the wife of Bongo for her personal use. The money has been directly debited to the Gabon treasury's account in France.

In the seventh arrondissement, one of the wealthiest and most expensive parts of Pairs, the ruling family of Congo Brazzaville decided to make more investments in real estate in the past month.

The wife and the son of Denis Sassou Nguesso, the president, decided to buy two flats on one street for a total of $7.2 million.

Strong suspicion

William Bourdon, a prominent French lawyer, told Al Jazeera that all the purchases "can't have been financed by the sweat of those heads of state".

"Neither their children or their cousins are known for their brilliant trading or business skills," he said.

"There is a strong suspicion that the money paying for all that is coming from the theft of public money. The World Bank, the IMf and the UN regularly denounce the corruption of some African leaders."

The public display of personal wealth abroad by the presidents when the living conditions of their own citizens are largely below the poverty line is causing anger and dismay.

"It is outrageous, we're angry at those in charge of the the country and who can't seem to be able to buy a school bench for the kids, put electricity in towns for people to have light, who can't set up a water system so that people have drinking water,” Serge Moutsila of the Congolese diaspora federation, said.

"Why do they buy Ferraris when there aren't any roads in the country? What's the point?"

African citizens residing in France intend to file a civil complaint against the presidents they accuse of embezzlement and corruption. The French banks and businesses which dealt with the personalities on trial could also face money laundering charges.

Al Jazeera contacted the Paris embassies of Angola, Burkina Faso, Congo-Brazzaville, Equatorial Guinea and Gabon.

Angola, Burkina Faso and Gabon denied the charges. The others declined to comment.

'Thieving governments'

Transparency International (TI) is an organisation that attempts to challenge corruption around the world.

Laurence Cockcroft, TI's chairman, told Al Jazeera: "The international community is beginning to clampdown on this through a variety of international instruments.

"But the instruments themselves are not enough. We need to implement them effectively not only in those countries that are being plundered but also in those countries that are receiving resources as well.

"It's a tragedy, especially for a continent that is living in dire poverty, not because of lack of resources, but rather because it is being run by governments of thieves."


Source: http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exer...27AA4C8886.htm
__________________
<?php echo "Nangadef"; ?>
Réponse avec citation
  #2 (permalink)  
Vieux 26/02/2008, 03h13
cactus cactus est déconnecté
Super Moderator
 
Date d'inscription: février 2008
Messages: 90
cactus is on a distinguished road
Par défaut

Toutes ces acquisitions sur le dos des pauvres contribuables africains! Ces personnes oublient qu'elles rendront des comptes un jour...
Réponse avec citation
  #3 (permalink)  
Vieux 07/03/2008, 02h48
cactus cactus est déconnecté
Super Moderator
 
Date d'inscription: février 2008
Messages: 90
cactus is on a distinguished road
Par défaut

apparemment bongo n'apprécie pas que l'on rescence son patrimoine immobilier. voici quelques extraits d'un article paru dans Le Figaro "Le torchon brûle entre la France et le Gabon"
Libreville menace Paris d'expulser les Français en situation irrégulière alors qu'un reportage sur France 2 a récemment dénoncé le patrimoine immobilier du chef d'Etat gabonais Omar Bongo.
La relation historique entre la France et le Gabon bat de l'aile. Il faut dire que les motifs de discorde se sont multipliés ces derniers temps si bien que Libreville a annoncé « réfléchir à la suite à donner aux relations franco-gabonaises ».

Lundi soir, la diffusion sur France 2 d'un reportage sur l'important patrimoine immobilier du président Bongo en France n'a pas été du goût des autorités gabonaises. Le ministère gabonais des affaires étrangères a «exprimé son étonnement sur la diffusion par l'audiovisuel d'Etat d'un dossier qui a fait l'objet d'un non-lieu de la justice française». Ce reportage révèle notamment d'après des procès-verbaux publiés en janvier par le quotidien Le Monde que le président gabonais disposerait de trente-trois appartements ou maisons, dont un hôtel particulier de 18 millions d'euros à Paris.

Le Quai d'Orsay a assuré que le reportage diffusé par France 2 relevait de « la liberté de la presse ».


http://www.lefigaro.fr/international...t-le-gabon.php
Réponse avec citation
Réponse



Utilisateurs regardant la discussion actuelle : 1 (0 membre(s) et 1 invité(s))
 
Outils de la discussion
Modes d'affichage

Règles de messages
Vous pouvez ouvrir de nouvelles discussions : nonoui
Vous pouvez envoyer des réponses : nonoui
Vous pouvez insérer des pièces jointes : nonoui
Vous pouvez modifier vos messages : nonoui

Les balises BB sont activées : oui
Les smileys sont activés : oui
La balise [IMG] est activée : oui
Le code HTML peut être employé : non
Trackbacks are oui
Pingbacks are oui
Refbacks are oui


Fuseau horaire GMT. Il est actuellement 20h10.


 » Espace Membre

[ S'inscrire ]

 » Outils
Créer votre propre album
Écrire un blog
Écouter la radio en ligne

 » Pub

 » Sites Intéressants
Site de rencontres pour musulmans

Édité par : vBulletin® version 3.6.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
LinkBacks Enabled by vBSEO 3.0.0 Tous droits réservés.
Version française #13 par l'association vBulletin francophone