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- <text id=91TT1606>
- <title>
- July 22, 1991: Scandals:Taken for a Royal Ride
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- July 22, 1991 The Colorado
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 46
- SCANDALS
- Taken for a Royal Ride
- </hdr><body>
- <p>In the wake of the B.C.C.I. debacle, a trustful sheik and more
- than a million depositors are left holding the bag
- </p>
- <p>By John Greenwald--Reported by Jonathan Beaty and S.C. Gwynne/
- Washington and Aileen Keating/Bahrain
- </p>
- <p> How could an impeccably honest Bedouin sheik get stuck in
- a mess like this? Despite his solid-gold reputation, Sheik
- Zayed bin Sultan al-Nahayan, ruler of Abu Dhabi and President
- of the United Arab Emirates, found himself last week at the
- center of the largest global banking scandal ever. As the most
- recent owner of the notoriously corrupt Bank of Credit &
- Commerce International, which regulators closed earlier this
- month, Zayed has become the unwitting goat for nearly two
- decades of alleged fraud by the bank's Pakistan-based managers
- and for years of neglect by banking authorities around the
- world. After investing $1 billion to shore up B.C.C.I. since he
- acquired it last year, Zayed faces the humiliation of losing
- control of the bank, and the moral--if not legal--responsibility for helping to bail out depositors who were
- victims of fraud.
- </p>
- <p> The sheik had plenty of companions in misery as shock
- waves from the B.C.C.I. shutdown rippled across the globe.
- Authorities seized more than 75% of the bank's $20 billion of
- assets in 69 countries. Customers from Bahrain to Beijing
- suddenly found themselves cut off from their funds. Political
- sniping broke out in Britain when members of the opposition
- Labour Party attacked regulators for hastily closing 25 branches
- of B.C.C.I. across the country. Panama pleaded with the Bank of
- England to return $18 million of government funds that ousted
- dictator Manuel Noriega had squirreled away in B.C.C.I. accounts
- in Britain. In the African republic of Botswana, officials kept
- the local B.C.C.I. branch open and guaranteed all loans and
- deposits to prevent a run.
- </p>
- <p> Everywhere the same wrenching question arose. How could
- regulators in the U.S., Britain and other countries have allowed
- B.C.C.I. to develop into a monstrous criminal enterprise whose
- activities ranged from laundering drug money to financing
- clandestine arms sales? Authorities seemed content for years to
- ignore mounting evidence, provided by private audits and former
- B.C.C.I. officers, of the bank's misdeeds. According to leaked
- audit reports, B.C.C.I. used deposits to enrich many of its Arab
- investors--and then covered up the fraudulent transactions.
- The bank also cultivated a global network of political contacts
- to help keep regulators at bay. The heavy hitters in cluded
- former Defense Secretary Clark Clifford, since 1982 chairman of
- Washington's First American Bankshares, which B.C.C.I. secretly
- gained control of in the mid-1980s. (Clifford has denied
- knowledge of B.C.C.I.'s ownership.)
- </p>
- <p> Nowhere was the anguish and turmoil over B.C.C.I.'s
- collapse greater than in Britain, where the Bank of England
- froze more than $400 million of deposits in 120,000 accounts
- held largely by Indian and Pakistani families and small
- businesses. The outraged depositors included some 60
- municipalities that had placed as much as $160 million of public
- funds in B.C.C.I. accounts. Customers may have to wait months
- to receive what is insured under British law: 75% of their
- money, up to a maximum of (pounds)15,000, or $24,000 at current
- exchange rates. Shaken B.C.C.I. depositors jammed hastily
- arranged telephone hot lines, some manned by fluent speakers of
- Hindi, Urdu and other Asian languages, with calls for advice.
- At the same time, many of the 1,200 B.C.C.I. employees who lost
- their jobs in the shutdown marched outside the Bank of England
- to protest the move.
- </p>
- <p> As British anger mounted, some financial experts accused
- the Bank of England and the accounting firm Price Waterhouse,
- which had audited B.C.C.I.'s books since 1985, of failing to
- warn the public early enough about the huge problems at the
- bank. While a recent audit uncovered widespread fraud at
- B.C.C.I. and triggered this month's global crackdown, U.S.-based
- Price Waterhouse had previously signed its public audits of the
- bank without exposing irregular practices. Price Waterhouse
- vehemently denied that it had overlooked problems at the bank
- and said the firm was insured against any lawsuits that
- disgruntled B.C.C.I. customers might bring.
- </p>
- <p> Many countries swiftly joined the B.C.C.I. crackdown after
- the global sweep shut most of the bank's operations. In China
- authorities closed B.C.C.I.'s branch in the Shenzhen Special
- Economic Zone, nerve center of the country's program to
- encourage private enterprise. Next door, Hong Kong closed the
- bank's 25 branches, which had 40,000 depositors, after
- regulators dithered for days while insisting that the offices
- were "viable and sound."
- </p>
- <p> Furious Abu Dhabi officials protested the timing of the
- global shutdown. It came, they said, just as Zayed was planning
- to pony up fresh funds to buttress B.C.C.I.'s finances and was
- preparing to reorganize the bank into three units based in
- London, Abu Dhabi and Hong Kong. Perhaps adding insult, the Bank
- of England tried to persuade Abu Dhabi to help rescue British
- depositors. While British officials conceded that the sheik had
- no legal obligation to reimburse customers, they hoped he might
- act "as a matter of honor." But Zayed seemed in no mood to offer
- assistance. Declared Keith Vaz, a Labour Member of Parliament:
- "It is incredible that the Bank of England did not contact the
- sheik, the leader of a friendly gulf state that supported us
- strongly in the war, and inform him what was happening."
- </p>
- <p> Zayed, whose access to $15 billion a year in national oil
- revenues makes him one of the world's richest men, does not
- easily forgive slights. Acquaintances say the ruler, who is in
- his mid-70s, will probably cover any losses suffered by gulf
- Arabs and may even extend his generosity to depositors in the
- rest of the Middle East. But he is unlikely to bail out anyone
- else, insiders say. They predict the ruler will seek to redress
- his own losses and public embarrassment by bringing lawsuits
- against any non-Arabs he deems responsible for his plight.
- </p>
- <p> While Zayed is revered throughout the Middle East for his
- honesty and diplomatic skills, he has proved less adroit in his
- financial affairs. The sheik was among Arab investors who in
- 1980 sustained heavy losses on silver investments when prices
- collapsed after the Texas-based Hunt brothers tried to corner
- the market. At home, Zayed's openhanded ways have led him to
- spend lavishly on his 19 sons and 22 daughters (he is rumored
- to have been married either 12 or 14 times). To celebrate his
- eldest son's 1981 wedding, Zayed threw a $40 million bash in Abu
- Dhabi that featured seven nights of revelry in a 20,000-seat
- amphitheater built for the occasion.
- </p>
- <p> Zayed is every bit as passionate a sportsman as he is an
- indulgent father. The lithe sheik is a fervent falconer who
- decamps regularly with an army of servants for lengthy hunting
- trips in Pakistan and the Sudan. He has raised camel racing to
- the status of a national pastime and financed efforts to
- reintroduce teeming herds of gazelles to Abu Dhabi (pop.
- 700,000), which in Arabic means "Father of the Gazelle." Zayed
- also loves greenery, and has lined Abu Dhabi's boulevards with
- flowers, trees and lawns.
- </p>
- <p> Zayed's free-spending habits made him an easy mark for
- Agha Hasan Abedi, a visionary Pakistani financier who founded
- B.C.C.I. in 1972. Abedi joined Zayed on falconry expeditions
- and, after winning the sheik's trust, persuaded him to acquire
- a 35% stake in the bank, which Abedi described as a Muslim-owned
- institution that would play a key role in financing Third World
- development. "Zayed is a totally instinctive man," says a
- Western diplomat who knows the sheik well. "He reacts from the
- heart and the gut, which is what gives him his sense of morality
- and fair play. But this, and his loyalty, is also why he stayed
- so close to Abedi even after he began to learn that things with
- Abedi and the bank were not as he thought."
- </p>
- <p> While the sheik remained personally aloof from financial
- details and steadfastly supported Abedi, B.C.C.I. was acquiring
- a reputation as the "bank of crooks and criminals," and its
- foundation was crumbling. In an effort to rescue the bank, Zayed
- put up $1 billion last year with the encouragement of the Bank
- of England and thereby raised his stake in B.C.C.I. to a
- controlling 77%. Zayed has maintained his man-of-the-desert
- dignity in the midst of the bank's turmoil. The sheik agreed to
- provide $200 million of fresh capital to First American, which
- is struggling with real estate loan problems in Washington, when
- he learned that his control of B.C.C.I. also made him owner of
- the U.S. bank.
- </p>
- <p> Zayed now appears headed for a showdown with his old
- friend Abedi, who is suffering from a heart ailment, and with
- B.C.C.I. managers in Pakistan, where the bank's dirty-tricks
- operations are headquartered. "There's going to be a big fight,"
- said a Karachi-based B.C.C.I. official, who predicted that
- "Pakistan will refuse to go along" with global efforts to wind
- down the bank. The official added that B.C.C.I. managers in
- Pakistan were "trying to figure out a way to restructure it,
- maybe shut it down and open under a new name in Southeast Asia."
- But with his eyes open at last, Zayed will have little
- reluctance to thwart such schemes--or walk away from them.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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