Current:Home > StocksUS jury convicts Mozambique’s ex-finance minister Manuel Chang in ‘tuna bonds’ corruption case -MoneyStream
US jury convicts Mozambique’s ex-finance minister Manuel Chang in ‘tuna bonds’ corruption case
View
Date:2025-04-18 06:12:55
NEW YORK (AP) — Former Mozambican Finance Minister Manuel Chang was convicted Thursday in a bribe conspiracy case that welled up from from his country’s “ tuna bond ” scandal and swept into a U.S. court.
A federal jury in New York delivered the verdict.
Chang was accused of accepting payoffs to put his African nation secretly on the hook for big loans to government-controlled companies for tuna fishing ships and other maritime projects. The loans were plundered by bribes and kickbacks, according to prosecutors, and one of the world’s poorest countries ended up with $2 billion in “hidden debt,” spurring a financial crisis.
Chang, who was his country’s top financial official from 2005 to 2015, had pleaded not guilty to conspiracy charges. His lawyers said he was doing as his government wished when he signed off on pledges that Mozambique would repay the loans, and that there was no evidence of a financial quid-pro-quo for him.
Between 2013 and 2016, three Mozambican-government-controlled companies quietly borrowed $2 billion from major overseas banks. Chang signed guarantees that the government would repay the loans — crucial assurances to lenders who likely otherwise would have shied away from the brand-new companies.
The proceeds were supposed to finance a tuna fleet, a shipyard, and Coast Guard vessels and radar systems to protect natural gas fields off the country’s Indian Ocean coast.
But bankers and government officials looted the loan money to line their own pockets, U.S. prosecutors said.
“The evidence in this case shows you that there is an international fraud, money laundering and bribery scheme of epic proportions here,” and Chang “chose to participate,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Genny Ngai told jurors in a closing argument.
Prosecutors accused Chang of collecting $7 million in bribes, wired through U.S. banks to European accounts held by an associate.
Chang’s defense said there was no proof that he actually was promised or received a penny.
The only agreement Chang made “was the lawful one to borrow money from banks to allow his country to engage in these public infrastructure works,” defense lawyer Adam Ford said in his summation.
The public learned in 2016 about Mozambique’s $2 billion debt, about 12% of the nation’s gross domestic product at the time. A country that the World Bank had designated one of the world’s 10 fastest-growing economies for two decades was abruptly plunged into financial upheaval.
Growth stagnated, inflation spurted, the currency lost value, international investment and aid plummeted and the government cut services. Nearly 2 million Mozambicans were forced into poverty, according to a 2021 report by the Chr. Michelsen Institute, a development research body in Norway.
Mozambique’s government has reached out-of-court agreements with creditors in an attempt to pay down some of the debt. At least 10 people have been convicted in Mozambican courts and sentenced to prison over the scandal, including Ndambi Guebuza, the son of former Mozambican President Armando Guebuza.
Chang was arrested at Johannesburg’s main international airport in late 2018, shortly before the U.S. indictment against him and several others became public. After years of fighting extradition from South Africa, Chang was brought to the U.S. last year.
Two British bankers pleaded guilty in the U.S. case, but a jury in 2019 acquitted another defendant, a Lebanese shipbuilding executive. Three other defendants, one Lebanese and two Mozambican, aren’t in U.S. custody.
In 2021, a banking giant then known as Credit Suisse agreed to pay at least $475 million to British and U.S. authorities over its role in the Mozambique loans. The bank has since been taken over by onetime rival UBS.
veryGood! (575)
Related
- New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
- In defense of gift giving
- In the West, Signs in the Snow Warn That a 20-Year Drought Will Persist and Intensify
- Environmental Groups Don’t Like North Carolina’s New Energy Law, Despite Its Emission-Cutting Goals
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- Russia's economy is still working but sanctions are starting to have an effect
- Facing an energy crisis, Germans stock up on candles
- Southwest plans on near-normal operations Friday after widespread cancellations
- DoorDash steps up driver ID checks after traffic safety complaints
- In Setback to Industry, the Ninth Circuit Sends California Climate Liability Cases Back to State Courts
Ranking
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- Hundreds of Toxic Superfund Sites Imperiled by Sea-Level Rise, Study Warns
- Restoring Utah National Monument Boundaries Highlights a New Tactic in the Biden Administration’s Climate Strategy
- Fox News' Sean Hannity says he knew all along Trump lost the election
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- Renewable Energy’s Booming, But Still Falling Far Short of Climate Goals
- Texas Justices Hand Exxon Setback in California Climate Cases
- Cultivated meat: Lab-grown meat without killing animals
Recommendation
Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
Restoring Utah National Monument Boundaries Highlights a New Tactic in the Biden Administration’s Climate Strategy
Polar Bear Moms Stick to Their Dens Even Faced With Life-Threatening Dangers Like Oil Exploration
Could you be eligible for a Fortnite refund?
See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
Warming Trends: Google Earth Shows Climate Change in Action, a History of the World Through Bat Guano and Bike Riding With Monarchs
Our Shopping Editor Swore by This Heated Eyelash Curler— Now, We Can't Stop Using It
Minnesota and the District of Columbia Allege Climate Change Deception by Big Oil