Heist of the Century: Confiscating Libya's Sovereign Wealth
Global Research Feature Article
URL of this article: http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=viewArticle&code=DIN20110424&articleId=24479
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Financial
Heist of the Century: Confiscating Libya's Sovereign Wealth
Funds (SWF)
by Manlio Dinucci
Global Research, April 24, 2011
Il Manifesto (translated from Italian) - 2011-04-22
The objective of the war against
Libya is not just its oil reserves (now estimated at 60
billion barrels), which are the greatest in Africa and whose
extraction costs are among the lowest in the world, nor the
natural gas reserves of which are estimated at about 1,500
billion cubic meters. In the crosshairs of "willing" of the
operation “Unified Protector” there are sovereign wealth
funds, capital that the Libyan state has invested abroad.
The Libyan Investment Authority (LIA) manages sovereign
wealth funds estimated at about $70 billion U.S., rising to
more than $150 billion if you include foreign investments of
the Central Bank and other bodies. But it might be more.
Even if they are lower than those of Saudi Arabia or Kuwait,
Libyan sovereign wealth funds have been characterized by
their rapid growth. When LIA was established in 2006, it had
$40 billion at its disposal. In just five years, LIA has
invested over one hundred companies in North Africa, Asia,
Europe, the U.S. and South America: holding, banking, real
estate, industries, oil companies and others.
In Italy,
the main Libyan investments are those in UniCredit Bank (of
which LIA and the Libyan Central Bank hold 7.5 percent),
Finmeccanica (2 percent) and ENI (1 percent), these and
other investments (including 7.5 percent of the Juventus
Football Club) have a significance not as much economically
(they amount to some $5.4 billion) as politically.
Libya, after Washington removed it from the blacklist of
“rogue states,” has sought to carve out a space at the
international level focusing on "diplomacy of sovereign
wealth funds." Once the U.S. and the EU lifted the embargo
in 2004 and the big oil companies returned to the country,
Tripoli was able to maintain a trade surplus of about $30
billion per year which was used largely to make foreign
investments. The management of sovereign funds has however
created a new mechanism of power and corruption in the hands
of ministers and senior officials, which probably in part
escaped the control of the Gadhafi himself: This is
confirmed by the fact that, in 2009, he proposed that the 30
billion in oil revenues go "directly to the Libyan people."
This aggravated the fractures within the Libyan government.
U.S. and European ruling circles focused on these funds,
so that before carrying out a military attack on Libya to
get their hands on its energy wealth, they took over the
Libyan sovereign wealth funds. Facilitating this operation
is the representative of the Libyan Investment Authority,
Mohamed Layas himself: as revealed in a cable published by
WikiLeaks, on January 20 Layas informed the U.S. ambassador
in Tripoli that LIA had deposited $32 billion in U.S. banks.
Five weeks later, on February 28, the U.S. Treasury
“froze” these accounts. According to official
statements, this is "the largest sum ever blocked in the
United States," which Washington held "in trust for the
future of Libya." It will in fact serve as an injection of
capital into the U.S. economy, which is more and more in
debt. A few days later, the EU "froze" around 45 billion
Euros of Libyan funds.
The assault on the Libyan
sovereign wealth funds will have a particularly strong
impact in Africa. There, the Libyan Arab African Investment
Company had invested in over 25 countries, 22 of them in
sub-Saharan Africa, and was planning to increase the
investments over the next five years, especially in mining,
manufacturing, tourism and telecommunications The Libyan
investments have been crucial in the implementation of the
first telecommunications satellite Rascom (Regional African
Satellite Communications Organization), which entered into
orbit in August 2010, allowing African countries to begin to
become independent from the U.S. and European satellite
networks, with an annual savings of hundreds of millions of
dollars
Even more important were the Libyan investment
in the implementation of three financial institutions
launched by the African Union: the African Investment Bank,
based in Tripoli, the African Monetary Fund, based in
Yaoundé (Cameroon), the African Central Bank, with Based in
Abuja (Nigeria). The development of these bodies would
enable African countries to escape the control of the World
Bank and International Monetary Fund, tools of neo-colonial
domination, and would mark the end of the CFA franc, the
currency that 14 former French colonies are forced to use.
Freezing Libyan funds deals a strong blow to the entire
project. The weapons used by "the willing" are not only
those in the military action called “Unified Protector.”
Il Manifesto, April 22, 2011
Translated from
Italian by John
Catalinotto
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©
Copyright Manlio Dinucci, Il Manifesto (translated from
Italian) , 2011