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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Report links corruption, Afghan bank

Some cash smuggled in airline food trays

David Zucchino Los Angeles Times

SAROBI, Afghanistan – Afghanistan, notorious for institutionalized corruption, has reached breathtaking new levels of officially sanctioned theft as details emerge of a massive conspiracy to loot the privately owned Kabul Bank.

An independent review released Wednesday said hundreds of millions of dollars was embezzled in a sophisticated scheme that allegedly involved close associates of President Hamid Karzai, including his brother. The review described brazen fraud driven by cronyism and nepotism, perpetrated by politically connected Afghans who stole the bank’s deposits and forced its collapse.

The fraud was abetted by weak oversight and a justice system perverted by political influence – “the perfect environment” for fraud, a summary report said. Interference came from top officials loyal to Karzai, who the report said handpicked those to be charged in the fraud – thus diverting prosecutors from well-connected conspirators who stole millions.

“Kabul Bank was nothing but a fraud perpetuated against depositors, and ultimately all Afghans,” said the report.

The inquiry outlined in the report was conducted by an independent commission in Afghanistan made up of Afghan and international finance experts. It was financed by international donors.

Kabul Bank, which collapsed in 2010 and went into receivership in April 2011, was looted of $935 million in what the report said was one of the world’s largest bank failures, representing nearly 6 percent of Afghanistan’s gross domestic product. The fraud undermined already shaky confidence in the country’s nascent political, justice and banking systems as a multibillion-dollar U.S. nation-building effort struggled to create viable Afghan institutions.

More than 92 percent of Kabul Bank’s assets were reserved for 19 politically powerful individuals or companies, for a total value of $861 million, the 87-page report said.

The conspirators kept two sets of books – a phony set for regulators and another set that kept track of embezzled funds. The fraud was legitimized by corrupt accounting firms, “seemingly established for the sole purpose of producing fraudulent documents to support loan files,” the report said.

Some of the hundreds of millions in looted cash was smuggled out of the country in airline food trays of the now-defunct Pamir Airways, according to the report. The airline was established through loans from Kabul Bank.

Government authorities knew of the airline smuggling scheme in 2009 but did not pursue a serious investigation, the report said. The attorney general’s office within the Karzai government did not mount a credible investigation into the fraud until April 2011 – seven months after panicked bank customers stampeded branches to withdraw their money in response to reports of fraud.

Even then, the report said, “the final decision about who to indict was made at the political level.” Prosecutors from the attorney general’s office were summoned by senior presidential aides and told to make the indictments “conform to decisions made.”

Much of the money ended up in the United Arab Emirates. Other assets were stashed in more than 20 countries, including Switzerland, Britain, South Korea, Russia, Turkey, Latvia and the United States. Some cash was spent to build lavish villas in Dubai.

Ultimately, the bank had to be bailed out by Afghanistan’s central bank, at a cost of at least $825 million.

“This is the money from the budget of Afghanistan, from the pockets of the Afghan people,” Drago Kos, chairman of the Independent Joint Anti-Corruption Monitoring and Evaluation Committee, said.

The committee’s report said the fraud has forced the Afghan government to divert funds needed for education, health care and infrastructure in the desperately poor country: “Every citizen in Afghanistan will bear the cost of the hundreds of millions of dollars required to secure deposits and the tens of millions of dollars required to deal with the aftermath.”