Mauritius Freezes Assets Linked to Angola's Sovereign Wealth Fund
By Jean Paul Arouff
PORT LOUIS, April 11 (Reuters) - Mauritius has frozen bank accounts and suspended business licences linked to QG Investments Africa Management, a firm run by the man who helps run Angola’s sovereign wealth fund, according to a court document and a regulatory source.
QG Investments Africa Management, which said it was cooperating with authorities, is run by Jean-Claude Bastos de Morais, a business partner of Jose Filomeno dos Santos and director of Switzerland-based Quantum Global Investment Management.
The son of José Eduardo dos Santos, Angola’s former president, Jose Filomeno dos Santos was until recently the head of the national sovereign wealth fund.
The younger dos Santos has been charged with fraud against Angola’s central bank, involving the transfer of $500 million in the United Kingdom. The funds were frozen and then returned to Angola’s central bank.
The moves at de Morais’ firm in Mauritius came after Angolan officials visited in Indian Ocean island last week, a regulatory source on Mauritius told Reuters.
Following a Mauritius Supreme Court ruling, seen by Reuters on Wednesday, the island’s Financial Services Commission suspended the licenses for seven QG Investments Africa funds, according to the source, and froze 25 of its bank accounts.
On Monday, the Mauritian newspaper Le Mauricien reported that a further 33 bank accounts had been frozen, bringing the total to 58.
“There was a reputational risk on our jurisdiction, therefore we had to act promptly,” the Mauritian regulatory official told Reuters, adding that the steps had been taken in collaboration with investigations by Angolan authorities.
In a statement, QG said it was cooperating with the relevant authorities. “We remain confident and resolute in our ability to defend ourselves vigorously against the unwarranted attacks on our reputation,” it said.
It has denied any links to the $500 million transfer that was frozen in Britain.
Angola’s Finance Ministry, which has led previous investigations of financial malpractice, did not respond to a request for comment.
Dos Santos is the highest-profile figure to be investigated for corruption since President Joao Lourenco took power last September, vowing to combat years of endemic graft in Africa’s second-largest oil producer.
His half-sister, Isabel dos Santos, has also been removed as chair of state oil company Sonangol. (Reporting by Jean Paul Arouff in Port Louis, additional reporting and writing by Stephen Eisenhammer in Luanda, editing by Larry King)
By Jean Paul Arouff
PORT LOUIS, April 11 (Reuters) - Mauritius has frozen bank accounts and suspended business licences linked to QG Investments Africa Management, a firm run by the man who helps run Angola’s sovereign wealth fund, according to a court document and a regulatory source.
QG Investments Africa Management, which said it was cooperating with authorities, is run by Jean-Claude Bastos de Morais, a business partner of Jose Filomeno dos Santos and director of Switzerland-based Quantum Global Investment Management.
The son of José Eduardo dos Santos, Angola’s former president, Jose Filomeno dos Santos was until recently the head of the national sovereign wealth fund.
The younger dos Santos has been charged with fraud against Angola’s central bank, involving the transfer of $500 million in the United Kingdom. The funds were frozen and then returned to Angola’s central bank.
The moves at de Morais’ firm in Mauritius came after Angolan officials visited in Indian Ocean island last week, a regulatory source on Mauritius told Reuters.
Following a Mauritius Supreme Court ruling, seen by Reuters on Wednesday, the island’s Financial Services Commission suspended the licenses for seven QG Investments Africa funds, according to the source, and froze 25 of its bank accounts.
On Monday, the Mauritian newspaper Le Mauricien reported that a further 33 bank accounts had been frozen, bringing the total to 58.
“There was a reputational risk on our jurisdiction, therefore we had to act promptly,” the Mauritian regulatory official told Reuters, adding that the steps had been taken in collaboration with investigations by Angolan authorities.
In a statement, QG said it was cooperating with the relevant authorities. “We remain confident and resolute in our ability to defend ourselves vigorously against the unwarranted attacks on our reputation,” it said.
It has denied any links to the $500 million transfer that was frozen in Britain.
Angola’s Finance Ministry, which has led previous investigations of financial malpractice, did not respond to a request for comment.
Dos Santos is the highest-profile figure to be investigated for corruption since President Joao Lourenco took power last September, vowing to combat years of endemic graft in Africa’s second-largest oil producer.
His half-sister, Isabel dos Santos, has also been removed as chair of state oil company Sonangol. (Reporting by Jean Paul Arouff in Port Louis, additional reporting and writing by Stephen Eisenhammer in Luanda, editing by Larry King)
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