Salah 'Izz Al-Din - Lebanon Ponzi

International investment frauds.

Salah 'Izz Al-Din - Lebanon Ponzi

Postby farscaper » Mon Oct 26, 2009 12:30 pm

Hizbullah-affiliated Shi'ite Lebanese businessman Salah 'Izz Al-Din, suspected of running a $2 billion Ponzi scheme, was arrested in Lebanon in early September 2009 after declaring bankruptcy. [1]

Several days after the scandal hit the headlines, the Lebanese daily Al-Safir reported that thousands of Lebanese and other nationals had lost money in 'Izz Al-Din's scheme, and that the investigation was being closely monitored by Lebanese parliament speaker Nabih Berri, Hizbullah secretary-general Hassan Nasrallah, and prominent Lebanese Shi'ite leader Ayatollah Muhammad Hussein Fadhlallah. [2] It was also reported that many senior Hizbullah officials had invested money with 'Izz Al-Din and suffered financial losses. [3] Fuad Al-Hashem, columnist for the Kuwaiti daily Al-Watan,claimed that the Hizbullah organization had likewise lost $683 million in investments with 'Izz Al-Din. [4]

In the aftermath of the scandal, numerous articles appeared in the Lebanese media criticizing Hizbullah and holding it responsible for the fraud, because of 'Izz Al-Din's affiliation with it. Hizbullah was blamed for encouraging the public to trust 'Izz Al-Din and to invest with him, and some even demanded that it compensate those who sustained losses.

Following are excerpts from articles on the subject:

Nasrallah: Senior Hizbullah Officials Invested in the Scheme

Hizbullah secretary-general Hassan Nasrallah denied any connection between his organization and 'Izz Al-Din's bankruptcy, but acknowledged that Hizbullah and several of its top officials had invested funds with 'Izz Al-Din. Nasrallah accused certain elements in Lebanon of using the scandal to harm the reputation of Hizbullah senior officials, called all insinuations that Hizbullah had had a hand in 'Izz Al-Din's bankruptcy "lies," and denied that Hizbullah senior officials had any money at their disposal. He also denied that Hizbullah had encouraged the public or its own members to invest funds with 'Izz Al-Din, and contended that the amount of money 'Izz Al-Din had been claimed to possess prior to his bankruptcy was exaggerated, estimating the total sum at $400,000 at most.

However, Nasrallah admitted the possibility that "Hizbullah may have invested funds with 'Izz Al-Din," but claimed that "their sum total could not have exceeded four million dollars." He added: "From the outset there were rumors, and we have heard a lot of talk, but now it is clear that [only] a very small number of Hizbullah officials had invested funds with 'Izz Al-Din. Some of them invested the money they had received as compensation for their homes destroyed during the July [2006] war, while others had got some money together with the help of their families… A rumor reached me that one senior [Hizbullah] member had invested a million dollars [with 'Izz Al-Din]. Naturally, this gave rise to uncertainty and numerous questions, so I asked him directly and got a straight answer: [he said that] the money had been put together by his brothers, who, as everyone knows, are tradesmen and are engaged in commerce, and that one of his sons had invested about 70 thousand dollars [as well], but that he [the Hizbullah member] personally had not got a penny to his name. I asked him where this money had come from, and he replied that he would cooperate with any Hizbullah-led investigation [of this matter], and that he had collected the money from his brothers, [other] relations, and friends, and invested it with 'Izz Al-Din."

The Lebanese daily Al-Akhbar reported that following the [scandal], Nasrallah had decided to hold a series of talks within Hizbullah in order to clarify certain issues and to deal with these phenomena, which were foreign to the spirit of the organization and everyone associated with it. [5]

Ibrahim Al-Amin Criticizes Hizbullah's New Mores

In light of this episode, Ibrahim Al-Amin, chairman of the executive committee of the Lebanese daily Al-Akhbar and known to be close to Hizbullah, published an article harshly criticizing Hizbullah and the new lifestyle and mores its members had adopted - which, he said, contravene shari'a and the Spartan ways that it prescribes.

He wrote: "No one can justify the 'Izz Al-Din [affair], and it should be taken as a powerful warning against the social circle which he represents in conduct and in rationale… This man is inseparable from Hizbullah - not just close to it - [meaning that] most of those who invested with him belong to families [associated with] Hizbullah, its members, or supporters. In fact, the main reason that many people trusted him was that he was rumored to be 'Hizbullah's partner.'

"It is impossible to stem the rumors that are being spread regarding the actual amount of money lost [in the scheme], the difference between the total investments and the sum people were supposed to receive in return, or the identity of the investors - [in fact,] the lists that have appeared in the media include everyone, even - and this is unprecedented - prominent Hizbullah leaders, both known and unknown…"

Hizbullah and Its Affiliates Have Violated Shari'a Principles

"So why should the recent events be regarded as a warning? Firstly, because it is surprising that a religious milieu that follows the principles and rules of shari'a [i.e. Hizbullah] should object to banking operations that violate shari'a principles [i.e. lending money with interest] while at the same time trying to justify their own profit of 40% from shady machinations of that man ['Izz Al-Din]. [Because] eventually it became clear that these schemes… had been wrecked on the shoals of the recent global [economic] crisis - which first erupted on the stock exchange and its ancillaries [where interest is earned on investments]…

"In other words, those who objected to the principle of earning interest on money, as practiced by the banks, accepted the same transaction based on a different rationale."

Abandoning Asceticism in Favor of Cupidity

"Secondly, [these events should be taken as a warning,] since it is extremely odd that this milieu, which had for generations followed an ascetic lifestyle, suddenly decided to switch to another [lifestyle] that entails living beyond its means and revolves around what is generally known as cupidity. If this is not the case, then why risk such [large] sums of money?...

"It is as if [this milieu] had, overnight, cast aside all rational and realistic reasoning, along with its unassuming lifestyle and modest needs. Many [of its members] relinquished the principle whereby a man [must always be ready] to sacrifice his life in this transient world, and embarked on a quest for… consumerism, which is incompatible with both the reality of their life and with the level of their cultural and social development, and which also contravenes their social rituals, interests, and preoccupations.

"[These people] seek to present themselves in a light that, while not unlawful - since anyone has the right to live like that - is incompatible with the principles of asceticism and self-sacrifice for a cause that calls for sacrifice in human [lives] and human blood…" [6]

http://www.memri.org/bin/articles.cgi?P ... D=SP259009
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Salah 'Izz Al-Din - Lebanon Ponzi

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Re: Salah 'Izz Al-Din - Lebanon Ponzi

Postby farscaper » Mon Oct 26, 2009 2:06 pm

10/06/09 - A Lebanese businessman with close links to the party has been arrested on suspicion of defrauding investors of up to £500 million.

A Hizbollah MP is among those who have lost money, and victims are thought to include a number of other senior officials, ordinary members and supporters.

The scandal has forced Hizbollah on to the defensive, with its secretary general, Hassan Nasrallah, having to deny involvement.

The scandal has been particularly damaging because financial speculation and the accumulation of personal wealth appears to directly contradict the party's religious ideology.

"Its public image has been tainted," said Amal Saad Ghorayeb, a Hizbollah expert. "Wealth taints you if you are a Khomeinist ideological party."

Some investors now say they expect the party to compensate them, claiming they were encouraged to invest with the businessman, Salah Ezzedine, because of his closeness to Hizbollah officials.

"Hizbollah must do something," said one investor, 33, who asked to be called Ali. "Ezzedine was close to them, they should be responsible about this."

Mr Ezzedine, a Shia known for his piety who also ran a number of legitimate businesses, was charged with embezzlement after his scheme collapsed.

Hizbollah's Shia heartland in South Lebanon has been hit hard with one resident estimating that at least 70 people in the towns of Toura, Shour, and Maaroub had bought in. Some of them are thought to have been investing on behalf of several other people.

"They are blaming me for the loss of their money," Ali said. He said he sold family land and gathered money from his mother, sister and two friends to invest £200,000.

Mr Ezzedine's middle men allegedly told clients they were investing in commodities such as gold and iron, and promised profits of up to 40 per cent.

But the scheme – believed to be like a Ponzi, in which one investor's money would be used to pay another – collapsed as losses spiralled out of control.

Investors say they had doubts about the improbably high returns and the lack of paperwork but they were mollified by the strength of Mr Ezzedine's Hizbollah connections.

"We heard people close to Hizbollah were doing business with him, and the party said that he was a trustworthy person," Ali said. "I thought, what the hell, everyone's making money, I should as well."

Although the group has its own private army, it is also a political party with a crucial role in current negotiations to form the next Lebanese cabinet.

The party is not itself accused of wrongdoing, and is said to have helped in Mr Ezzedine's arrest.

But its implicit endorsement of Mr Ezzedine has put it in a difficult position, and it has been forced to deny that it is considering some kind of compensation scheme.

The pro-Hizbollah newspaper Al Akhbar also ran a critical editorial, saying that the apparent willingness of so many party members and associates to invest in the scheme should sound an "alarm bell".

The organisation, famous for its probity and discipline, could be permanently damaged, it said.

"People are kind of shocked now," said one resident of a South Lebanon village. "They are not mad at Hizbollah, they can never be, they worship the party.

"But they started saying it looks like the poor will stay poor, fight and die poor, and the rich become richer."

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldne ... cheme.html
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