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New asset freeze in TeliaSonera bribe probe

The Stockholm District Court on Tuesday ordered an unprecedented 1.8 billion kronor ($277 million) asset freeze for the Uzbekistan-based partner of Nordic telecom firm TeliaSonera as part of an ongoing bribery investigation.

New asset freeze in TeliaSonera bribe probe

The order comes after a January 16th ruling by the Svea Court of Appeal which found that the case could be tried in Sweden, even though the representatives of Takilant suspected of bribery have never stepped foot on Swedish soil.

According to the TT news agency, the asset freeze is the biggest in Swedish legal history.

The court stated that there was reasonable suspicion that Gayane Avakyan and another Takilant representative were guilty of “aggravated bribery crimes or participation therein”.

“For sequestration, someone has to be suspected of carrying out a crime and these two people are suspected of aggravated bribery crimes,” said Judge Håkan Larsson to the TT news agency.

The equivalent of 200 million kronor of Takilant’s money held in accounts at Nordea bank had been previously been ordered frozen.

Prosecutors suspect that TeliaSonera paid bribes Takilant, which has ties to Gulnara Karimova, the daughter of Uzbek President Islam Karimov, in order to set up operations in the central Asian country.

In September, TeliaSonera allegedly paid a bribe worth 2.2 billion kronor to Takilant for a 3G mobile telephone licence and frequencies in Uzbekistan, as well as a 26-percent stake in the Uzbek company Ucell.

Takilant is a Gibraltar-based, one-woman company run by 22-year-old Gayane Avakyan, who has close ties to Karimova.

Karimova herself indirectly contacted one of TeliaSonera’s subsidiaries in 2010, explaining she needed more money, according to a source.

Prosecutor Gunnar Stetler refused to comment on Tuesday’s ruling.

TT/The Local/og

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CORRUPTION

Spain’s former king hit by new corruption probe

Prosecutors have opened a third investigation into the finances of scandal-hit former king Juan Carlos I in connection with another probe into possible money-laundering offences, Spain's top legal chief said on Friday.

Spain's former king hit by new corruption probe
Former king Juan Carlos I arrives for the funeral of Jean d'Aviano, Grand Duke of Luxembourg in 2019. Photo: John Thys / Belga / AFP
The announcement by Attorney General Dolores Delgado came two days after the Supreme Court confirmed anti-graft prosecutors were looking into the ex-monarch's credit card use.
   
“There is a third investigation into (the former sovereign) which was opened as a result of a report by SEPBLAC,” Delgado's office said, referring to Spain's money-laundering watchdog.
   
The case would be taken up by the Supreme Court, which is the only legal authority in Spain with the right to investigate a former head of state.
   
Spain's top anti-corruption prosecutor Alejandro Luzon will also take part in the investigation, Delgado said, without giving further details about the exact nature of the inquiry.
   
There was no immediate response to the announcement from the Sanchez-Junco law firm that represents Juan Carlos I.
   
It is the latest of a string of inquiries into the finances of the 82-year-old who fled into self-imposed exile in the United Arab Emirates three months ago.
   
On Wednesday, judicial sources confirmed anti-graft prosecutors had been investigating for months whether Juan Carlos I used credit cards linked to accounts not registered in his name in what could constitute a possible money-laundering offence.
   
Legal sources said they were looking into the origin of funds deposited in several Spanish bank accounts held by a Mexican business and an official in the Spanish Air Force, and whether they had been accessed by the former monarch.
 
 
Spanish and Swiss probes
 
Prosecutors had sent various legal requests abroad to determine whether the monies deposited in the accounts had been hidden from the Spanish tax authorities, the source said, without specifying which countries were involved.
   
If proven, the allegations could constitute a money laundering offence for which he could be prosecuted given that the movement of funds and use of the credit cards occurred after his abdication in June 2014, meaning he no longer had immunity as head of state.
   
The first probe involving Juan Carlos I was opened two years ago with prosecutors examining a Saudi high-speed rail contract that was won by a consortium of Spanish companies in 2011, seeking to establish whether the then-monarch was paid a commission.
   
According to Swiss daily La Tribune, Saudi's late king Abdullah deposited $100 million into a Swiss private bank in 2008 to which Juan Carlos I had access, prompting suspicions it was a kickback for the contract which was awarded three years later.
   
The inquiry was triggered following revelations by the octagenarian's former mistress Corinna Larsen, with investigators in Spain and Switzerland now looking into his finances.
   
On August 3, the former head of state announced he was going into exile abroad to prevent his personal affairs from undermining the reign of his son King Felipe VI, prompting anti-monarchists to accuse him of trying to “flee justice”.
 
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