Equatorial Guinea VP Teodorin Obiang sentenced in France
A French court has handed down a
three-year suspended jail term to Equatorial Guinea's Vice President
Teodorin Obiang for corruption.
The 48-year-old, known for his lavish tastes, is the son of the oil-rich West African country's president.
He was absent from the trial, where he was found guilty of embezzlement.
His
assets in France will be seized, including a mansion on Avenue Foch in
Paris. He also got a suspended fine of 30m euros (£27m; $35m).
In
November, Swiss prosecutors seized 11 luxury cars belonging to Mr
Obiang. They said he had plundered his country's oil wealth to buy
luxuries, including a private jet and Michael Jackson memorabilia.
Equatorial
Guinea's President, Teodoro Obiang Nguema, is Africa's longest-serving
leader and human rights groups accuse him of systematic repression of
opponents.
The Paris judge found that the president's son had used
his position as agriculture and forestry minister to siphon off
payments from timber firms who were exporting from Equatorial Guinea.
Mr Obiang's forestry company Somagui Forestal was "an empty shell used solely to channel public money", prosecutors said.
The
case against him was triggered by anti-corruption campaign group
Transparency International and a similar NGO, called Sherpa.
Mr
Obiang denied the charges, saying his wealth had come from legitimate
sources. His lawyers accused France of "meddling in the affairs of a
sovereign state", AFP news agency reported.
In 2000-2011 Mr
Obiang acquired a collection of luxury assets and properties in France,
including the €25m Avenue Foch mansion. He also boasted 18 luxury cars
in France, artworks, jewellery and expensive designer fashions, the
court found.
It is the first of three French investigations into
the alleged "ill-gotten gains" of long-standing African leaders and
their families.
The French daily Le Monde reports that the family
of Gabon President Ali Bongo has 39 French luxury properties, while 24
are owned by the family of Congo-Brazzaville's President Denis
Sassou-Nguesso. They also have about 200 bank accounts, French police
say.
BBC
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