VimpelCom Ltd, one of the world’s largest telecommunications companies, of whom Russian billionaire Mikhail Fridman has 47.85 percent voting stake in the company , yesterday agreed to pay $795 million to settle US and Dutch charges that it paid bribes to enter the Uzbekistan, the US Justice department announced.
VimpelCom’s subsidiary, Unitel LLC, was accused under the US Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) of using several executives and employees to pay more than $114 million to a ”relative” of Uzbek president Islam Karimov between 2006 and 2012 for mobile phone licenses and frequencies.
Will you offer us a hand? Every gift, regardless of size, fuels our future.
Your critical contribution enables us to maintain our independence from shareholders or wealthy owners, allowing us to keep up reporting without bias. It means we can continue to make Jewish Business News available to everyone.
You can support us for as little as $1 via PayPal at [email protected].
Thank you.
The charges were brought on by the US Department of Justice (DoJ), US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), and the Public Prosecution Service of the Netherlands.
VimpelCom is the world’s sixth largest telecommunications company and is subject to US regulators since its shares are traded on the New York Nasdaq stock exchange.
The settlement includes $167.5 million for the SEC, $230.1 million for the DoJ, and $397.5 million to the public prosecution service of the Netherlands.
The DoJ said that it had moved to seize $850 million paid as bribes by VimpelCom and other companies doing business in Uzbekistan in Swiss and other European accounts controlled by the relative of Uzbek president Islam Karimov who had influence over the Uzbek governmental body that regulated the telecom industry.
US regulators said that their investigation led to several countries, including Switzerland, the Netherlands, Latvia, Norway, and others, including a number of countries which are the hub of banking secrecy and money laundering like the Cayman Islands and British Virgin Islands.
Although the US and Dutch regulators did not name the relative, but media speculated it was Karimov’s eldest daughter Gulnara Karimova, who was placed under house arrest two years ago for corruption.
Gulnara is multi-faceted woman who had served as the country’s envoy to the United Nations, apart from being a fashion designer, pop musician, and is a popular culture celebrity in Uzbekistan.
According to VimpelCom and Unitel admissions, through various executives and employees, paid bribes to an Uzbek government official, who was a close relative of a high-ranking government official and had influence over the Uzbek governmental body that regulated the telecom industry.
According to the Doj, VimpelCom and Unitel structured and concealed the bribes through various payments to a shell company that certain VimpelCom and Unitel management knew was beneficially owned by the foreign official.
The bribes were paid on multiple occasions between approximately 2006 and 2012 so that VimpelCom could enter the Uzbek market and Unitel could gain valuable telecom assets and continue operating in Uzbekistan. VimpelCom and Unitel contemplated additional bribes in 2013, but those bribes were not completed before VimpelCom opened an internal investigation.
VimpelCom admitted that it falsified its books and records and attempted to conceal and disguise the bribery scheme by classifying payments as equity transactions, consulting and repudiation agreements and reseller transactions.
VimpelCom and Unitel paid a total of more than $800 million in bribes and the official’s laundered the corruption proceeds through accounts held in Latvia, the UK, Hong Kong, Ireland, Belgium, Luxembourg and Switzerland.
The bribe money was transmitted through financial institutions in the US before they were deposited into accounts in these countries, thereby also subjecting them to US jurisdiction.
”As they have admitted in court filings, VimpelCom, the world’s sixth largest telecommunications company, with securities traded in New York, and its subsidiary, Unitel, built their business in Uzbekistan on over $114 million in bribes funneled to a government official. Those payments, falsely recorded in the company’s books and records, were then laundered through bank accounts and assets around the world, including through accounts in New York.” said US Attorney Bharara.
READ MORE: Mikhail Fridman
Russian billionaire Mikhail Fridman’s LetterOne, through its Dea subsidiary, has taken a step forward to build a portfolio of attractive oil assets after the collapse in oil prices. LetterOne Group beat off More…
Swiss petrochemicals company Ineos has agreed to acquire a strong portfolio of natural gas assets in the North Sea from a UK subsidiary of DEA Deutsche Erdoel AG, which is part of Russian billionaire, Mikhail Fridman’s More…
Billionaire Mikhail Fridman is looking to invest $16 billion in telecoms businesses in the West, and he’s enlisted a substantial advisory board of industry players to help him get the job done, The Financial More…
British Petroleum’s CEO Bob Dudley said on Friday the company plans to invest $12 billion together with its partner DEA in Egyptian gas fields. They intend to develop five trillion cubic feet of gas resources More…
U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron threatened to force Russian billionaire Mikhail Fridman to sell his North Sea Energy assets unless Fridman gives him assurances. According to Reuters, a spokesman for Cameron said, More…
UPDATE: German energy giant RWE plans to go ahead with the $5.9 billion sale of its Dea subsidiary to a Russian oligarch despite the British government’s renewed objections. (Deutsche Welle) The British More…
Tycoon Mikhail Fridman is leading An investment group of Russian billionaires looking to purchase luxurious student facilities in London, for an estimated $824 million, propertyweek.com reported. Fridman wants More…
Russian billionaires who have been bitten by sanctions are buying up student housing in the U.K, according to Property Week. LetterOne, an investment group founded by Mikhail Fridman, oil tycoon and, with a net More…
Mikhail Fridman was right. Russia’s economic problems don’t stem from its inability to juggle its numbers — they’ve been juggling like it was the Moscow Circus. And they don’t even stem More…