Pinochet’s lost millions: the UK connection
Posted by svolk on 23rd August 2009
Hugh O’Shaughnessy, The Independent on Sunday, August 23, 2009
British authorities and the financial sector are linked for the first time to the late Chilean dictator’s £1bn fortune. Hugh O’Shaughnessy reports
AFP / GETTY IMAGES
Santiago, 1988 Pinochet watches F-16 warplanes fly past. Much of his wealth came from military procurement
Two-and-a-half years after the death of General Augusto Pinochet, a report by the Chilean police task force charged with investigating money-laundering has claimed that British authorities and the financial sector were complicit in hiding his massive ill-gotten fortune.
Though the Pinochet family protects the details of its wealth with the help of bankers and advisers from Britain and other countries, the pile of assets in cash, gold, government bonds and shares controlled by the family of the late dictator is now believed to amount to as much as £1bn.
The report by Brilac, the Chilean police task force, says that the freeze on the dictator’s funds issued in 1998 by the Spanish investigating magistrate Baltasar Garzon, who was seeking the ex-dictator’s extradition to Spain on charges of torture and murder, was in effect ignored by the financial sector in Britain, despite the fact that Britain was under an obligation to enforce it.
Professor David Sugarman, the director of the Centre for Law and Society at Lancaster University and author of a forthcoming book on Pinochet’s arrest and imprisonment, said yesterday: “It looks like some of the banks holding Pinochet’s funds did not comply with the letter and spirit of their duties of disclosure, due diligence and the legal requirement to report suspicious circumstances.”
Posted in: Chile, Corruption, Pinochet, Riggs Bank | No Comments »