By Souad Mekhennet
August 28, 2008
FRANKFURT: Switzerland has released millions of dollars in assets belonging to Asif Ali Zardari, a leading Pakistani politician who is expected to be named the country's president next week, Swiss authorities said.
Zardari's accounts were frozen in 1997 at the request of Pakistani authorities investigating allegations that Zardari had received kickbacks while he was a government official and his wife, Benazir Bhutto, was prime minister.
In June, Pakistan's attorney general notified the Swiss that he was no longer investigating Zardari, who leads one of the country's largest political parties.
The attorney general wrote that neither Zardari nor Bhutto had done anything illegal, and that the charges had been politically motivated, the Swiss prosecutor general, Daniel Zappelli, said Wednesday in a telephone interview. As a result, the Swiss dropped a money-laundering case against Zardari and released his assets.
"For money laundering to be proven, you have to show it was the product of a crime, but we don't have any evidence for a crime committed in Pakistan," Zappelli said.
The value of the assets is about $60 million, said a Swiss official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the figure had not been disclosed publicly.
The Swiss action came as a shock to Daniel Devaud, the judge in Geneva who originally investigated the charges. He said it should not be interpreted as a sign of Zardari's innocence.
"It would be very difficult to say that there is nothing in the files that shows there was possibly corruption going on after what I have seen in there," Devaud said in a telephone interview. "After I heard what the general prosecutor said, I have the feeling we are talking about two different cases."
Zardari and Bhutto were suspected of using Swiss bank accounts to launder millions of dollars, allegedly bribes paid by companies seeking customs inspection contracts in Pakistan in the 1990s. Bhutto, who was killed in December, and Zardari always denied the allegations, saying they were politically motivated.
August 28, 2008
FRANKFURT: Switzerland has released millions of dollars in assets belonging to Asif Ali Zardari, a leading Pakistani politician who is expected to be named the country's president next week, Swiss authorities said.
Zardari's accounts were frozen in 1997 at the request of Pakistani authorities investigating allegations that Zardari had received kickbacks while he was a government official and his wife, Benazir Bhutto, was prime minister.
In June, Pakistan's attorney general notified the Swiss that he was no longer investigating Zardari, who leads one of the country's largest political parties.
The attorney general wrote that neither Zardari nor Bhutto had done anything illegal, and that the charges had been politically motivated, the Swiss prosecutor general, Daniel Zappelli, said Wednesday in a telephone interview. As a result, the Swiss dropped a money-laundering case against Zardari and released his assets.
"For money laundering to be proven, you have to show it was the product of a crime, but we don't have any evidence for a crime committed in Pakistan," Zappelli said.
The value of the assets is about $60 million, said a Swiss official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the figure had not been disclosed publicly.
The Swiss action came as a shock to Daniel Devaud, the judge in Geneva who originally investigated the charges. He said it should not be interpreted as a sign of Zardari's innocence.
"It would be very difficult to say that there is nothing in the files that shows there was possibly corruption going on after what I have seen in there," Devaud said in a telephone interview. "After I heard what the general prosecutor said, I have the feeling we are talking about two different cases."
Zardari and Bhutto were suspected of using Swiss bank accounts to launder millions of dollars, allegedly bribes paid by companies seeking customs inspection contracts in Pakistan in the 1990s. Bhutto, who was killed in December, and Zardari always denied the allegations, saying they were politically motivated.