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SUBJECT: PARADISE LOST: HOW CORRUPTION BANKRUPTED SEYCHELLES
365 Classified By: AmbREF: A. A) PORT LOUIS 267
B. B) PORT LOUIS 316
C. C) PORT LOUI
Sassador Cesar B. Cabrera for reasons 1.4 b and d.
corruption throughout the ranks are behind the Seyche1. SUMMARY: (SBU) An overall lack of transparency an
dlles'
recent international appeal for help after a chronic lack of
debt burden of 175 percent of GDP effectively left the couforeign exchange, loan defaults, drastic inflation, and an
excessive
ntry bankrupt. After defaulting twice on government
debt payments, Seychelles will be forced to accept economic
aque economic system. END SUMMARY. ----------------- CURreforms they have so long rejected and possibly confront and
correct a seemingly corrupt, government controlled, o
pRENT SITUATION
-----------------
2. (U) According to studies conducted by various
International Monetary Institutions (IMI) as well as the
foreign exchange shortages, and excessive state conSeychelles Chamber of Commerce and Industry (SCCI),
Seychelles has been flirting with bankruptcy for years due to
poor economic policies, severe
trol of the economy. Despite having a
per capita GDP of 10,000 USD and being classified as an
"upper-middle income" country by the World Bank, the
of foreign exchange led to Seychelles defaulting on a prinSeychelles recently was forced to the breaking point due to
rising inflation and perennial shortages of foreign exchange.
3. (U) In July 2008, lac
kcipal and interest repayment
of a 85 million USD private placement note causing
international credit rating agency Standard and Poors (S&P)
to downgrade the country's foreign currency sovereign credit
from CCC, in anticipation of the government also defaulting rating to Selective Default (SD) from the already low rating
of CCC/C. The July default prompted S&P to lower the credit
rating on Seychelles 230 million USD global bond, which
matures in 2011, to CCC-
on this loan, which indeed did
happen in early October 2008.
4. (U) According to an October 29 Reuters Africa report, the
government is asking 12 percent of its civil service, the
largest employer in the nation, to "voluntarily" resign in
accordance with the new IMF program, the Rupee depreciated order to cut costs on the national economy, which has a debt
burden that, according to government statistics, equals about
175 percent of GDP. On November 3, international press
reported that after exchange controls on the Rupee were
lifted i
n78 percent to the U.S. Dollar moving the exchange
rate from USD 1 = SRs 8 to USD 1 = SRs 14.29. This coupled
with the global credit crisis is sure to peak already high
inflation rates in Seychelles.
5. (C) The credit downgrades and continued defaults coupled
reschedule Seychelles' debt until they worked with the Iwith an all time high year-on-year inflation rate of 31.6
percent driven by rising food and oil prices suggest that
Seychelles will have a difficult time securing foreign loans
to continue to finance their debt. The Paris Club lenders
stance to reject a request t
oMF on a comprehensive program
made Seychelles' desperation more apparent.
-----------------------------------
REASONS GIVEN FOR THE CURRENT CRISIS
-----------------------------------
6. (C) A quick glance at international headlines on the
Seychelles economy will suggest that this small,
global economic situation has exacerbated the problemnet-importing island nation is a victim of the global
financial crisis, or rising commodity prices. The Seychelles
Government (GOS) offers vague official statements that cite
"irregularities" or "errors" as a reason for recent defaults
on debt payments. Even though it is clear that the current
,
history, local contacts, and recent occurrences suggest
instead that Seychelles faces this situation due to internal
culprits -- especially the lack of transparency, government
PORT LOUIS 00000381 002 OF 005
cronyism, and corruption.
7. (C) International bodies, including USG advisors, have
uded devaluing the currency, privatizing state-owned enterwarned Seychelles for many years that their economy was in
need of drastic reform. For example, in 2005, a visiting
World Bank team urged them to prepare an 'Economic
Restructuring and Debt Workout' plan and provided them with a
proposed timetable for its implementation. Key first steps
in this plan inc
lprises, and meeting with donors to address
debt in arrears. Even before the World Bank suggestions,
Paris Club lenders urged Seychelles to adopt an IMF program
and devalue their currency. Seychelles remained defiant to
these suggestions. In 2006, the Permanent Secretary at the
Ministry of Finance (MOF) explicitly told a USG-funded debt
tic debt only, even though at the time GOS had just takmanagement advisor that GOS would not consider currency
devaluation in the immediate future. Furthermore, despite
the exasperating effects that overvaluing the rupee had on
foreign exchange and GOS' ability to pay off foreign debt,
the Central Bank of Seychelles (CBS) and MOF Debt Management
Team encouraged the USG advisor to focus on dome
sen out a 200
million dollar global loan (approximately 1/3 of GDP) with a
2011 maturity date.
8. (C) Although government officials cited concerns for
short-term social unrest as the reason they avoided
implementing economic reform, opposition leaders, private
sector representatives, and others -- in private meetings
with EMBOFFS -- all pointed to fraud and corruption as the
helles Trading Company (STC)), and use budget surreal reason. Continued pressure from the IMF and
multilateral lenders to undertake reform measures caused GOS
to finally accept the need to introduce modest reform in late
2006 to allow the rupee to fall from USD 1= SRs 5.50 to USD 1
= SRs 8, announce moderate privatization of the Seychelles
Savings Bank and several units of the former Seychelles
Marketing Board (renamed the Sey
cpluses to pay down domestic debt.
9. (C) GOS acceptance to undertake these reforms seems
positive until one considers that shortly after initiating
reforms, GOS halted the depreciation of the rupee leaving it
overvalued, as witnessed by its persistent trading on the
black market. The STC does not have any buffer stock of
commodities, so price inflation was immediate at the onset of
e sector, there is still reason to suspect that budget seconomic reform, which wreaked havoc on foreign exchange
reserves, so the GOS remained hesitant to restart
depreciation measures (Note: On November 3, GOS lifted
exchange controls due to a mandate by the new IMF program.
End Note.) In addition, even the moderate privatization
announced concerning the Savings Bank and STC has yet to take
place, and according to Post contacts in the priva
turpluses will
continue to be spent on government projects instead of
financing domestic debt.
10. (C) In a September 2008 conversation, local businessmen
and SCCI members told ECONOFF that they have little faith in
the government paying down its domestic debt (currently 2/3
of GDP) with budget surpluses because throughout the years,
the government has consistently put any reported surplus into
. In another example, local businessman Marc Hoareau, mheavily lauded but ineffective government projects. One
businessman noted the 25 million USD desalination project,
championed by the head of the ruling Seychelles People's
Progressive Front (SPPF) and, by most accounts, real ruler of
Seychelles, Albert Rene as the project that would make water
shortages something of the past. To date, Seychelles has
water shortages and the plant still does not wor
kentioned
the prawn farm in Coetivy Island as another lionized
initiative that has not lived up to its billing, left the
country indebted some 75 million USD, and could not be sold
to any private management company because it was deemed
non-competitive on the world market.
-------------------------------------------
SHADY LINKS BETWEEN BUSINESS AND GOVERNMENT
-------------------------------------------
s call him, Siva. Reportedly, Siva will use the island to 11. (C) According to the Indian Ocean Newsletter, a weekly
periodical sponsored by Indigo Publications, the government
PORT LOUIS 00000381 003 OF 005
could not find a buyer for the prawn project on Coetivy
Island, so it decided to cut its losses and sell the island
for 117 million USD to Indian businessman and recently
president-appointed Ambassador-At-Large, Chinnakannan
Sivasankaran, or as the loca
lcreate a tourist complex of ten
250 room hotels. Although this seems like it could be a
regular business deal, many local contacts tell EMBOFFS that
business deals like these, that hint at corruption and are
motivated by political gains with little regard to the local
economy, are destroying Seychelles' economic future.
12. (C) SCCI Chairman Albert Payet recently told POLOFF that
in 2004, when the SCCI met with MOF, the SCCI recommended
ers reported with disappointment that many tourist resorts (samending the Tourism Incentive Act (TIA) so that once tourism
was operating at almost full capacity, investors and hotels
would receive fewer concessions, but to their chagrin, the
new TIA released earlier this year granted even more
concessions. Official MOF documents dated November 26, 2007,
show concessions given to the Ephelia Resort which exempts
the resort from 75 percent of the regular taxes imposed on an
investor. Moreover, SCCI mem
bpecifically citing
North Island, Le Marriott, The Banyan Tree, and the
Silhouette) that do their business primarily in foreign
currencies effectively bring little foreign exchange (FOREX)
through Seychelles banks because of retention rates that
allow some to retain up to 100 percent in foreign coffers.
13. (C) In an October 30 meeting, Ralph Vocere, editor of a
local paper and member of an opposition party, illustrated
the situation further with an anecdote about the Barbaron
d be able to keep 100 percent of their earnings. This is alHotel, the hotel with reportedly the most revenue earned in
FY 2008. According to Vocere, the foreign owners of Barbaron
Hotel also have a commanding stake in Aitel Phone Services,
which is a big local phone service provider that does 95
percent of its business in rupees. The owners could not
repatriate the funds from Aitel given the current status of
the rupee, so GOS reportedly made a deal with the owners that
they could invest in a local hotel to earn foreign exchange
and wou
llegedly how the owners bought the Barbaron Hotel and now
are able to retain 100 percent of the FOREX. Contrastingly,
according to post contacts, local Seychellois hoteliers are
allowed to keep only 15 percent of the foreign exchange they
earn.
14. (C) Vocere reports that corruption, coupled with the
selling off of lands to what he calls the "business mafia,"
is what is holding back the Seychelles economy. He believes
that until this problem is tackled, the IMF and World Bank
ident Michel after only being in Seychelles for about a year.can keep attempting to help the Seychelles, but it will be to
no avail. Vocere added that the "mafia" consists of key
Seychellois figures such as SPPF chief Albert Rene and other
SPPF cronies, Indian businessman Siva, local businessmen the
Savy brothers, and "Arab investors." "Mafia" member or not,
no one can deny that Siva has profited from his time in
Seychelles. He now owns many business, three islands in the
Seychelles archipelago, and was nominated Ambassador-at-Large
by Pre
s This nomination was supposedly a reward for
bankrolling Seychelles debt and providing money to government
officials. Soon after awarding him the position, the
Government of Seychelles requested a U.S. diplomatic visa for
Ambassador-at-Large Siva. When Post requested information as
to the plans and nature of the diplomatic trips planned by
Siva, the GOS withdrew the application.
15. (C) According to Vocere, the current IMF team has
uncovered 3 billion USD in overseas Seychellois bank
use of a tip from the Seychelles authorities that he was smaccounts. The day after Vocere made this information public
during a delivered speech in downtown Victoria on November 4,
he was arrested on charges of "unlawful assembly" and remains
detained. This is not the first time Vocere has been
detained for criticizing the government. In October 2008,
Vocere's printing press was shut down by the Seychelles
government and he traveled to Mauritius to print his
opposition paper. According to the GOM, the Mauritians
detained Vocere at the airport bec
auggling heroine into
Mauritius. No heroin was found and the GOM released him
PORT LOUIS 00000381 004 OF 005
without any charge.
16. (C) When asked about possible corruption on a local
television program on September 4, Guy Adams, the head of
Seychelles Petroleum Company -- one of the largest and most
profitable companies in the nation -- said that his company
had not been properly audited in 20 years. This would have
made it easy, he declared, to siphon off millions of dollars
if had wanted to do so.
lles gossip. Among the many allega-----------------------------------
CHANG-LENG: CHARACTER OF CORRUPTION
-----------------------------------
17. (SBU) While corruption allegations surround many SPPF
partisans and associates, no figure has received as much
negative attention for the current crisis as former Central
Bank Governor, Francis Chang-Leng. Admittedly, there were
many reports in local press accusing Chang-Leng of corruption
before the recent loan defaults, but even if there were truth
to the claims none was substantiated beyond normal Seych
etions against Chang-Leng, one
promulgated by many sources is that he spent 8 million SRs of
Seychellois taxpayer rupees to treat a select group of female
employees that he calls his "Strategic Team" to overseas
trips with him.
18. (C) While in recent meetings with ECONOFF, Chang-Leng
dismissed the Seychelles load default as an "irregularity,"
local press reported that Chang-Leng unilaterally issued the
government debt that caused the default and that it was
months before the Ministry of Finance or President knew about
Michel's hand to investigate the claims. Even with hard fit. Press reports also suggested that the Lehman Brothers'
representative who bought the risky debt had close ties with
Chang-Leng and alleged that some money issued had been
pocketed by Chang-Leng. In an October 30 meeting, Ralph
Vocere said that he has been accumulating corruption evidence
against Chang-Leng, but was waiting for the right time to
release it. Vocere believes Chang-Leng's recent streak of
independence and his recent vacating of his CBS post leaves
him vulnerable for the attack, which will force President
acts of corruption, the general take from many Post contacts
is that a conviction of Chang-Leng will be difficult due to
"a weak judiciary."
---------
JUDICIARY
---------
19. (C) Another suspicious situation is the liquidation and
subsequent sell-off of The Plantation Club, formerly the
second largest hotel in Seychelles. On August 5, Judge
Andrew Ranjan Perera ordered the liquidation and helped the
GOS -- who only held an eight percent share -- shutdown the
hotel. The next day, Perera was made Chief Justice. Local
previous owner, threatened to force the former owner, a U.Smedia reported that Perera was appointed Chief Justice as a
reward for his judgment in SPPF's favor. This raised
concerns of the local private sector community and the
opposition press. The perception and allegations of
government corruption grew when the hotel was eventually sold
off to the lowest bidder out of three, European Hotels and
Resorts Limited, a newly formed group of hotel investors with
ties to the SPPF establishment and a Saudi businessman,
Sheikh Abdul Mohsin bin Abdulmalik Al-Shaikh, who has,
according to the
. Citizen, out of business since 2006.
European Hotels and Resorts Limited's directors, lawyers, and
bankers have direct links to the Saudi businessman.
20. (C) According to many sources, including the former
Plantation Club owner and SCCI members, the Plantation Club
ruling is only one of many corrupt rulings by the weak
Seychelles judiciary. The constitution states that the
judiciary is independent; Embassy contacts, such as
Seychellois lawyer Frank Elizabeth, say that this is not the
case. For example, most court judges are either naturalized
system to yield influence over the judiciary. For example, citizens or citizens of other Commonwealth countries, such as
Tanzania, Uganda, and Sri Lanka. There is only one Supreme
Court judge, one appeals court judge, and two magistrate
court judges who are citizens by birth. Initially,
PORT LOUIS 00000381 005 OF 005
recruiting foreign judges and magistrates made up for the
lack of professionals in the years following independence,
but today Post contacts report that the foreigners are put in
these positions because they are more malleable.
Allegations abound that the government also uses a patronage
Former Chief Justice Vivekanand Alleaar, a Mauritian citizen
who resigned in January 2008 after numerous allegations of
corruption, is rumored to have received prime real estate for
a development project from the SPPF and funding for his son's
education in England for his loyalty to the party.
-------
Comment
-------
21. (C) For all of the speculation and shadowy figures in
Seychelles, it is hard to get any concrete evidence to point
at any one person. The plethora of circumstantial evidence,
however, does support that there is significant corruption in
the system. Post believes that corruption is the critical
reason why a country as wealthy as Seychelles (900 million
USD GDP) has suffered so many persistent economic problems.
The current IMF economic reforms coupled with the global
financial crisis are sure to have drastic social implications
in the Seychelles. Although sharp inflation, and job loss
may cause social unrest, it could also lead to Seychellois
finally confronting the corruption behind the system that put
them in this mess.
CABRERA
http://dazzlepod.com/cable/08PORTLOUIS381/An Extract of the following link:
33 comments:
Oh my God, this confirms everything Christopher Gill has been writing for Seven (7) years.
I am shocked! No wonder he never gets sued.
Seselwa Unite!
Sesel Pou Seselwa!
Christopher Gill
The heading says it all:
Paradise Lost: How corruption bankrupted Seychelles.
Lack of DEMOCRACY has allowed corruption to flourish. The pain of the 2008 economic reforms could have been avoided. People, let the scales drop from your eyes. Boycott the elections.
I wouldn't agree with you saying that it is the lack of democracy that has allowed corruption to flourish. It is rather corruption that has prevented democracy from fourishing.
When we think of what percentage of Seychellois is involved in corruption in some way or other eitehr directly or indirectly, it explains our fear for change as a nation in its entity.
How many of us have paid a bribe to get things done quickly or simply joined them rather than beat them in order to avoid the hassle? How many businesses have endulged in the practice in order to get things done or simply secure itself and its employees?
Someone once wrote that even at the morgue in Victoria they are taking bribes by tricking with the books(getting paid under the table for keeping the deceased in the cooler longer than the free period). At Victoria hospital the middle management is using the emergency budget to order non emergency material at a price way higher than the normal. Why? Because of dealings with the seller abroad who splits his cut.
As you can see guys, we all want freedom of both speech and the choice to make decisions, but few of us(Seychellois) want the responsibility involved in living democratically and too many people have become comfortable with corruption money that is dripping in their pockets for them to want change. The latter also includes our dear opposition.
I'd like to hear from any of you who have never paid a bribe of some sort in Seychelles. Those of you who cannot claim that you have never paid a bribe, well you as just as guilty as keeping the corruption beast alive as Rene, Michel, Chang-Leng etc, maybe at a smaller scale, but nevertheless the same.
Koz Kouyon
The difference is that Parti Lepep officially encourages bribes to stay in power. Bribery is against official opposition policy. SNP has many policies that are good for the country, but will adversely affect a section of its support. It is the duty of the government to address this scourge. It is no excuse that some people who support the opposition take or pay bribes. Few people really believe that Pierre and Carpin have not been bribed by PL. So, that's not helping. We do not help the country overcome scourges like these, when we point the finger unnecessarily at the opposition. The government feels exonerated and that no action is needed. The scourge must be tackled so that no one, opposition or government supporter, demands a bribe to perform a service. Moral preaching or peer pressure has little effect. Legislation and its enforcement is required.
Government can set a good example by its own actions. People think there is serious corruption high up in the government where sums run into millions. They also see the government reward those who are guilty of wrongdoing in their government positions. They therefore see nothing wrong supplementing their meagre income by a R100 bribe.
Totally correct, no-one really goes for the Big fish, but are quick to try and manipulate the small fishes into doing it for "the good of the country".
I do not pay bribes. I expose government people that solicit bribes from me to release projects.
It works and it is cheaper then paying bribes.
You all should do the same. We will gladly do it for you, for FREE.
Contact Seychelles Freedom Party (SFP) office with your information.
On Facebook send us a message at "La Liberte" face page, the real one with a finger sticking up in the sky, not the fake one, trying to trip up our effort.
We have caused a number of corrupt employees in government to move on for exactly that. We do not have to mention their names now, they are gone.
We have shown that it can be done and we do not have to sit around and cry over being bribed.
No Seychellois should have to pay any BRIBE to live a normal life in Seychelles!
Putting a stop to it starts with each one of us.
It can be done.
Seselwa Unite!
Sesel Pou Seselwa!
Christopher Gill
Gill; the public will continue to take your bribe money to boycott - and just for laughs I might even turn up at your office to get mine but like all the rest we will still vote!
Please, you are free to say what you like, but please remain coherent and sensible.
Looking like a BOZO through your comments, makes the PL Communists look bad.
By all means, in spite of my request, say what you like.
Thank you.
Seselwa Unite!
Sesel Pou Seselwa!
Christopher Gill
To get rid of bribery in Seychelles one needs to take a hard look at the Indians living among us. They introduced bribery to Seychellois; we used to be a very innocent nation until Indians showed us otherwise. If we want to expose bribery let us all start to be private investigators by keeping a close watch on all the customs employees. If you see that they have an Indian friend or acquaintance it is a given that money is exchanging hands between them so let us be vigilant and try to catch and expose them. It's a start and it's the least we can do for our country.
You'll win the Fight against Corruption when civilization ends.
Reply to Brigette-
Singapore was the most corrupted place to do business in Asia once.
Look at Singapore today.
New York City was one of the most corrupted cities in the 1960 and 1970s in the USA. Look at New York City today.
Same for Chicago. Look at Chicago.
Corruption is not an option for a micro state. The internal State Department communique tells that story loud and clear.
Our generation needs to do better, because our times demand it.
If we cannot do better, then what we see around us, we fail ourselves, and the next generation coming. In that case, that happens to be my children.
Seselwa Unite!
Sesel Pou Seselwa!
Christopher Gill
LOL LOL LOL
Who's wearing rose tinted glasses now?
http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/h/alan_g_hevesi/index.html?inline=nyt-per
http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/r/charles_b_rangel/index.html?inline=nyt-per
http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/k/bernard_b_kerik/index.html?inline=nyt-per
to name but a few in the old NYC!!
Don't get me wrong, i'm all for eradicating corruption, but it starts with proof not hearsay. You have a story about a corrupt official, you print it, show everyone the proof, don't pussyfoot if the person in question is related to you in some way (friend/neighbour/business associate/church
goer/relative/parents evening/member of your party)
you get me.
Print it in a Newspaper for everyone to see, not on blogg where it's not that easy for everyone to access.
You keep saying how you've done so much so far back home, you claim you have already started eradicating & you are on the road to leading us out of the huge debts we're in, if you get to lead the Country of course, but so far How many Government Officials have you put behind bars due to your blogg?
Brigitte
To get the proofs we must dismantle the crooks government then we will have access to documents and a new governemnt with the help of other nations bring the case fully to light.For example,the u$2,5 biilons hidden in Swiss bank,once a new governmnet is in place through diplomatic process between the Swiss and Seychelles new governemnt,those crooks can be exposed and bring to justice.this is how for example money stolen by Gadhafi are being frozen by othert states in order to give it back to the new lybian governemnt.
Jeanne DÂrc
To dismantle the crooks you must have proof.
You expect people to wait/vote for you to come to power, to liase with the swiss gov who was liasing with the sey gov, to expose corruption. Like the swiss gov is just gonna turn around & say here they are, they're the ones that were collaborating with the sey gov to defraud the country? You think the swiss gov doesn't know that they are helping defrauding the country????
sorry...was liasing with the SPPF Gov!!
What have proven the most effective way to have results.Do you see how Lybian are getting the bilkions back with the help of those countries in which Gadhafi hide the money.Dito to Mubarak,Ben ali,soon Assad and others.Without the helps of those countries where the money was hidden no of those countries like Eypyt would have ever find the money back or at least less than expected.other example,Geramny,France,USA,and many other western countires have with the helps of Switzerland been able to encovered billions of dollars banked ib Swiss banks by national of those above countires than escape taxation.It was only after USAmGeramny etc ask the Swiss its help that they could encover those involved.So you could imagine that if countires like USA with the world best secret agents needs Swiss help probably a small country like Seychelles would need more than that.
Jeanne DÂrc
Swiss liases with any governemnt as it does liase with new governemnt when the old fall.Ex-dictator Sony Abbache of Nigeria knows something,Mobuto of Ex ZAIRE,Papa and baby doc of Haiti,Pinochet of Chile,Marco of Phillipines and many others all of them after being disposed their stolen billions banked in Switzerland was given back to the new governemnt.it would not be any different for PP crooks.
Jeanne D'Arc
What was Swiss Bank UBS doing while the latest Rogue Trader filtered £1.3billion from it, only 'discovered' thurs gone??
I suppose you're going to tell me Kweku Adoboli did it all by himself. In which case UBS is very very dumb not to have noticed all that time...dating back to 2008!!
I doubt very much!! ;)
That is an intern problem nothing to do with Swiss government.it is a big blow for the reputation of UBS has been investing millions to polish its reputation after the wolred crisis in 2008.I wpersonally have an account with UBS i can tell you i am not scared on losing my money. UBS is a big and powerful bank the lost though sound big ,is nothing than pocket for them.Of course the Swiss governemnt which a well -organised one will scrutinized the loopholes that allow the Ghanian to act irresponsibly and the boss of UBS will also be under pressure which can result in his sacking.
No panic the Swiss people know how to fix things look their economy at the moment it is one of the few in European succeeding while ohters are crawling to save themselves from banruptcy..
Jeanne D'Arc
LOL LOL..carry on living in the Truman Show ;)
Your bank, for 3 years "did not notice" the 'problem'. Your Too Big To fail bank.
As all big and powerful banks around the world,but the different Swiss banks have always fixed problem when they are face with and i do not b^doubt they will once again.Could Pp at least fix the corruption in our very little bank called Novobank?This will be a milestone in our history should Pp be able to fix that.
Jeanne D'arc
Don't divert the argument, it's corruption...in sppf...in the swiss bank..& everywhere else....you liasing with the swiss gov will not get any cash back...they might get more cash morelike.
By the way the person who stole at Nouvobanq comes from the opposition camp. For you to find out ....
It explains then why PP suddenly made it public.But since PP wants to give us the impression that it taking actions again malpractices when would Pp make public POOR AND YOUNG report of its mal practices?When would PP investigate Daivd Savy,Chang Leng depiect as the symbol of corruption by CIA 4,5 million gifted an ARAB and so on and on...
Jeanne D'Arc
Standard & Poor report.
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