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Author: LS

Libyan financial analyst: “changing the exchange rate is a historic decision”

 During a televised interview for Libyan WTV channel and Tabadul Platform, the Libyan financial analyst, Abdul Hamid Al-Fadhil, discussed the effects of creating a single exchange rate and expressed his optimism about this “ landmark  decision” that will reportedly be announced during the meeting of the Central Bank of Libya’s Board of Directors, next Thursday, considering it the last chance after so many years of suffering.

While encouraging and expressing a clear acknowledgement for such meetings, the financial analyst stressed that all the Libyans are waiting for these life decisions that would either make them happy or make them sad.

According to Al-Fadhil, the reluctance or delay in taking such crucial decision may deepen the crisis and put the Libyans not only under the weight of high prices and low income, but also under the weight of a differential pricing.

The economic analyst called on the officials who will meet next Thursday to be responsible because the Libyan people suffered a lot, confirming that the decision that should be taken is perfectly a historic and economic one.

” If the exchange rate will not be changed, holding peaceful demonstrations would be the only solution,” he said.

€927 million in cars, cash, boats breaching Libya sanctions seized

A total of €927,294,000 worth of goods headed to Libya, including stolen cars, have been seized by Customs between 2018 and 2020. 

Malta Customs said on Friday that these consignments were in breach of sanctions imposed on the movement of goods to Libya.

According to the daily newspaper Times of Malta, the seized goods include:
 
Four containers carrying stolen vehicles, valued at €95,000
• Three containers carrying fireworks, with an estimated value of €1,064,000
• Two containers carrying €926 million in paper currency
• 23 containers carrying boats, with an estimated value of €135,000

Libya economic talks set for Geneva next week

 The U.N. acting envoy on Libya Stephanie Williams will host an economic working group from Dec. 14-15 in Geneva, to discuss policy reforms, a U.N. spokeswoman said on Friday.

The talks, co-chaired by Egypt, the European Union and the Untied States, will include representatives of the main Libyan institutions, U.N. spokeswoman Alessandra Vellucci told a Geneva briefing, without elaborating.

Malta seizes record cocaine haul bound for Libya

Maltese authorities seized more than 600kg (1,300 lbs) of cocaine being sent to Libya in a record-breaking haul worth some 70 million euros ($85 million), the customs department said on Thursday.

The cocaine was being shipped from Ecuador and Columbia and was discovered hidden in a container on a ship at Malta Freeport late on Wednesday, the department said in a statement. Police have opened an investigation.

Customs said officials had seized 510 packets weighing 1.2kg each in what it described as a record-breaking seizure from a single container.

“To get a better perspective, during the whole of 2019 a total of 750kg (worth 84.5 million euro) were intercepted by Customs from 16 containers,” the statement said.

Libya: Oil exports set to jump to 1.24 million b/d

Libyan crude and condensate exports are poised to jump to a 13-month high of 1.24 million b/d this month, according to S&P Global Platts estimates compiled using data from shipping and trading sources.

This comes as Libya’s oil production has undergone a rapid rebound of almost 1 million b/d in the past two months after the UN-backed Government of National Accord and the self-styled Libyan National Army agreed a truce.

Crude and condensate loadings from Libya in December are scheduled to average 1,237,419 b/d compared with 1,070,809 b/d last month.

The last time the OPEC member exported a higher number was in October last year, when loadings averaged 1.25 million b/d, according to Platts estimates.

The increase in exports was driven by a boost in loadings from the Es Sider, Zueitina, Bouri, Brega and Zawiya terminals.

CBL unified board holds a ‘‘preliminary’’ meeting

The Central Bank of Libya, CBL, held Monday for the first time a full board meeting since 2014 after which the bank was split into two.

Unifying key institutions, including the CBL, and creating a single exchange rate across Libya have been key goals of a U.N.-led process aimed at resolving some of the economic problems obstructing a political solution to the conflict.

CBL said in a statement that it had held a preliminary meeting to discuss the reactivation of the board’s work including ensuring stability of prices, supporting the integrity of the banking system and adjusting the exchange rate.

In recent weeks the bank has also been involved in a public dispute with National Oil Corporation (NOC) over the payment of energy revenue.

Both have accused each other of inaccurately reporting oil revenues and NOC has said it will temporarily stop transfers of sales income to the bank’s account, holding them instead in the Libyan Foreign Bank.

UK ambassador, Sanalla discuss return of British companies to Libya

Libya’s state National Oil Corporation (NOC) and Britain discussed sector development, investment and training.

The discussions came during the meeting between NOC head Mustafa Sanalla and British ambassador to Libya, Nicholas Hopton at the NOC’s Tripoli headquarters.

The return of British companies to work in Libya, and the expansion of the constructive and fruitful partnership for the benefit of the two countries in the oil sector were also discussed.

Libya’s Foreign Ministry criticizes statement made by Stephanie Williams

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Government of National Accord criticized what was included in the openingstatement of the Acting Special Representative of the Secretary-General of the United Nations, Stephanie Williams, asking her to give names, and not to leave matters for guessing and interpretation when she talks about violations.

The Ministry indicated in a statement posted on its Facebook page that talking about the flow of weapons and the presence of foreign forces and mercenaries must refer to who attacked in the presence of the Secretary-General of the United Nations, and who started the arms flow process, and the names of the violators of the arms embargo resolution and who obstructed all Security Council resolutions.

The Foreign Ministry affirmed that the signing of agreements and memoranda of understanding by the Government of National Accord comes from the basis of its legitimate right and its legitimate duty to defend its citizens and the sovereignty of its state, as well as from being compatible with international law.

The Foreign Ministry’s statement affirmed the commitment of the Government of National Accord to the outcomes of the dialogue forum and to use all available resources for that commitment, including the arrangements necessary for the success of holding presidential and parliamentary elections on the date agreed upon on December 24, 2021.

Libya, Italy ink military cooperation deal

Libya’s Defence Minister Salah Al-Din Al-Namroush signed with the Italian Defense Ministry today, Friday, in Rome the Joint military-Technical Cooperation Agreement and the establishment of a Joint Military Cooperation Committee in various defence fields.

“We have agreed with the Italian side to cooperate in training and military education, exchange of experience, support, development, maintenance, consultations, cooperation on illegal migration, land and sea border security, munitions and mine clearance, and natural disaster and health emergency relief.” Al-Namroush said.

Where is Gaddafi’s money?- Report finds

Where is Muammar Gaddafi’s money? The so-called Panama Papers could now shed light on the search for this incredible fortune.

A central figure in the search for Gaddafi’s money is a man called Bashir Saleh Bashir, who was once the Libyan leader’s chief of staff and right-hand man. In Libya, he is still known as “Gaddafi’s banker.”

According to Süddeutsche Zeitung, Bashir is alleged to have invested and hidden the private wealth of the Gaddafi clan. In addition, he used to manage a multi-billion-dollar branch of Libyan state funds: namely, the oil-funded money reserve to which Gaddafi had free access. 

The so-called “Libya Africa Investment Portfolio” invested oil business proceeds in other African states, but where exactly the money flowed to can no longer be determined. 

Aassets belonging to Gaddafi’s banker, Bashir, were also frozen by the European Union and Switzerland. The state-run Libya Africa Investment Portfolio was, shortly thereafter, included on the sanctions list of the United Nations Security Council, due to its status as a “potential source of funding” for the Libyan regime. 

The Libya Africa Investment Portfolio owned shares of a front company called Vision Oil Services Limited, which Libya-experts Süddeutsche Zeitung contacted had no prior knowledge of.

Only on March 10, 2011, when the end of the Gaddafi regime becameapparent, were all outstanding invoices suddenly paid in full and was a “Certificate of Good Standing” obtained to reactivate the company.

The offshore company was camouflaged perfectly. Neither the Libya Africa Investment Portfolio nor Bashir were mentioned in any of the official documents. 

A Saudi Arabian man operating as the firm’s sham director and general manager had the power of attorney to open accounts at the Geneva bank Pictet, the Viennese branch of Landsbanki Luxembourg and Standard Chartered Bank in Singapore. This Saudi Arabian man was said to have previously done business with Jordanian oil smugglers and spent time in a Libyan prison for money-related offenses that maybe have been directly related to Gaddafi.

The local authorities of the British Virgin Islands deactivated the front company due to its outstanding administrative fees. It is not known if potential company assets had been transferred prior to this, and this information cannot be gleaned from the contents of the Panama Papers.

Bashir, however, suddenly re-emerged in Niger before disappearing again. He was sighted in South Africa several times and, according to rumors, lives in Swaziland. He is said to be the only person privy to all the secrets of Libyan investments in Africa, or so suggests the rumor-mill in Tripolis. Bashir does not speak with the press and couldn’t be reached by Süddeutsche Zeitung for a request for comment.

A breakthrough in the search for Gaddafi’s treasure seemed imminent in 2012, when Libya’s former head of intelligence services, Abdullah Sanussi, reported that Gaddafi had buried his gold in the Libyan desert. 

According to Libyan investigators, the country’s Organisation for Development of Administrative Centres (ODAC) — a gigantic ministry handling all state business and overseen by Dabaiba — awarded business contracts worth billions of dollars to numerous companies with direct links to Dabaiba’s family.

According to press reports, when auditors examined these business contracts more closely after Gaddafi’s fall, they discovered creative bookkeeping practices. According to these reports one of Gaddafi’s advisors explained to investigators that ODAC discrepancies had emerged quite early on, but these were not examined in any detail seeing as Gaddafi and as his sons were involved in managing ODAC.

Dabaiba did not answer Süddeutsche Zeitung’s request for comment. The Dabaiba family nevertheless wrote to the Guardian dismissing the allegations as baseless. Their Libyan lawyer claimed they are “not wanted by any judicial, financial or security bodies”.

“Although the disreputable Dabaiba changed sides at the height of the Libyan civil war and financed the rebels in his hometown of Misrata, the new government nonetheless froze his assets and placed his name on a list of men who were suspected of having embezzled state funds. He eventually moved to London, where his family owns a few valuable properties. Libyan investigators accuse Dabaiba of having dished out contracts worth several million dollars to companies either he or one of his relatives managed. He is said to have smuggled the profits from these dealings abroad through a network of shell companies.Süddeutsche Zeitung reported.

However, this might soon change. Many of the front companies, presumably owned by Gaddafi’s loyal cronies, were managed by Mossack Fonseca, the Panama law firm at the heart of the Panama Papers scandal that broke in April of this year.

The name of British national Riad G. appears in the documents repeatedly in connection with several of the front companies that Libyan investigators attribute to Dabaiba.

Riad G. went to school in Libya and attended university in London. His Facebook page indicates that he is connected to the Dabaiba family. He apparently once owned half the shares of a hotel in the Scottish Highlands: the company behind the hotel ownership was used to hide Libyan state funds, according to a document written by Libyan investigators, who were seeking legal help from the British and Scottish authorities. 

Süddeutsche Zeitung and Guardian have been able to access parts of these documents, which accuse Dabaiba of abuse of office and illegal money transfers that harmed the public budget, among other things.

According to the trade register, the company behind the luxury hotel is run by two men who received ODAC contracts worth several million in 2008.

Scottish authorities confirmed that investigations into this matter are currently underway. Investigators, for their part, are disinclined to believe Dabaiba’s most recent declaration of assets, which stated that he only owns a few cars, some jewelry and a farm with four camels.