Saudi crackdown targets up to $800 billion in assets
Authorities detain more
prominent businessmen, freeze bank accounts
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NEWS : The Saudi
government is aiming to confiscate cash and other assets worth as much
as $800 billion in its broadening crackdown on alleged corruption among the
kingdom’s elite, according to people familiar with the matter.
Several prominent businessmen are among those who have been
arrested in the days since Saudi authorities launched the crackdown on
Saturday, by detaining more than 60 princes, officials and other prominent
Saudis, according to those people and others.
The country’s central bank, the Saudi Arabian Monetary
Authority, said late Tuesday that it has frozen the bank accounts of “persons
of interest” and said the move is “in response to the Attorney General’s
request pending the legal cases against them.”
The purge is the most extensive of the kingdom’s elite in
recent history. Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the son of King Salman, was
named heir to the throne in June and has moved to consolidate power. He has
said that tackling corruption at the highest level is necessary to overhaul
what has long been an oil-dependent economy.
The crackdown could also help replenish state coffers. The
government has said that assets accumulated through corruption will become
state property, and people familiar with the matter say the government
estimates the value of assets it can reclaim at up to 3 trillion Saudi riyal,
or $800 billion.
“They reckon that they could get around 2 to 3 trillion
riyals from these people. That’s the number they are talking about,” said a
person close to the government.
Much of that money is abroad, which will complicate efforts
to reclaim it, people familiar with the matter said. But even a portion of that
amount could help Saudi Arabia’s finances. A prolonged period of low oil prices
forced the government to borrow money on the international bond market and to
draw extensively from the country’s foreign reserves, which dropped from $730
billion at their peak in 2014 to $487.6 billion in August, the latest available
government data.
The arrests were ordered by a newly established
anticorruption agency headed by Prince Mohammed.
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