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To: D. Long who wrote (11708)2/20/2002 10:38:46 AM
From: GUSTAVE JAEGER  Respond to of 23908
 
Re: Any Palestinian state will be characterized by poverty, violence, corruption, and gangsterism. Same as it is now under the PA. Or any Arab regime, for that matter.

ROFL! The pot calling the kettle black.... Israel already is the largest Laundromat in the area:

February 21, 2000

Israel Seen as Paradise for Money Laundering

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[...]

By WILLIAM A. ORME Jr.

JERUSALEM
-- Summoned to a downtown bank last month, the police arrested a woman who they suspected was laundering profits for foreign racketeers. A native of Chechnya, she had reportedly tried to open an Israeli account with $50 million in Venezuelan checks in the name of an apparently fictitious Gibraltar investment firm.

If so, it would not have been the first time Israel had attracted professional money-scrubbers.

In recent months, the authorities have been asked to investigate cash transfers linked to a $340 million insider-trading deal involving a Russian telecommunications company and to the huge money laundering scandal involving the Bank of New York. Last summer, the conviction of an Israeli crime boss in Miami for running a money laundering business for the cartel in Cali, Colombia, prompted renewed concern about the recycling of cocaine money here.

But the police and prosecutors here face an almost insurmountable problem: Money laundering is not a crime in Israel.

Although that may be about to change, right now Israel does not make it illegal to bank or spend the proceeds of illicit offshore enterprises. As a nation founded as a safe haven for Jews, there is a longstanding tradition of welcoming immigrants and their assets. Banks and brokerages are not obligated to verify the provenance of a customer's investment funds. Reporting requirements for new accounts are minimal, as are the penalties for a failure to comply with those rules.

"Israel is a paradise for money laundering, because it is not against the law," said Cmdr. Yossi Sedbon, head of the investigative division of Israel's national police. "I don't know if it is really that big a business here. But millions come in and go out, and you can't do anything about it."

Many families here fled nations that prohibited them from expatriating their money; those who managed to circumvent such restrictions were applauded, not interrogated. Immigrants from the former Soviet Union brought an estimated $2.5 billion to Israel in the 1990's, much of it from foreign accounts their home countries had restricted. Israel was not about to enforce Soviet-era capital controls or question the legality of those transfers.

But those policies have been systematically exploited by sophisticated international criminal networks, the authorities here say.

"If you want to get an Israeli passport and then go all over the world, it is very easy," Commander Sedbon said. "You need a Jewish mother, but if you don't have one, you can create one."

Informed estimates of money laundering by organized crime groups here in the last decade range from the hundreds of millions of dollars to the billions, with income from foreign tax evasion and business kickbacks increasing the figures.

Even if the authorities could prove that funds transferred here were the fruit of fraud or theft or narcotics sales, they could not -- as is often done in the United States and Europe -- seize the money or property bought with it. To prosecute, they must demonstrate that crimes were also committed in Israel. Even then, the money is usually off limits except for the payment of penalties.

Compounding law enforcement difficulties are Israel's strict secrecy laws on local bank accounts. Restrictions on accounts abroad, meanwhile, have been largely abolished. Israelis are no longer required to report offshore deposits of less than $5 million, and new immigrants need not report any foreign holdings. Millions can be wired from a citizen's foreign account to a local bank without facing any special reporting requirements.
[snip]

library.cornell.edu



To: D. Long who wrote (11708)2/20/2002 10:47:28 AM
From: GUSTAVE JAEGER  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 23908
 
As for Israel as an oasis of prosperity amidst an economic desert, just don't bet the kibbutz on it....

Wednesday, February 20, 2002 Adar 8, 5762

Occupation or prosperity

The data on the economy and unemployment published yesterday is very grave. Unemployment reached an unprecedented 258,600 in the last quarter of 2001, representing 10.2 percent of the work force, while the number of job-seekers also reached a new high - 209,300 in January. Unemployment not only deepened, it expanded: In January there were 24 townships where unemployment topped 10 percent, compared to 15 in 2001. The high unemployment rate is a direct result of the deepening recession. In the last quarter of 2001, local production dropped by 7.2 percent while commercial production plummeted by 12 percent. There were similar dramatic declines in investment and private consumption.

When data like this is reported, a series of automatic reactions follows. Politicians from the left and right are shocked. Histadrut chairman Amir Peretz called for an emergency team to fight unemployment, while Manufacturers Association President Oded Tirah issued a series of recommendations that would mostly help industrialists. But nobody dares touch on the real reason for the crisis: the lethal conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Authority.

The world economic crisis, which began with the bursting of the high-tech bubble and deepened after the terror attacks in the U.S., is shaking Israel's economy. Obviously, a small country cannot influence such global trends. But Israel is also not doing anything in those areas where it can shape its own destiny. The country's leaders continue to ascribe to the ethos of settlement in the territories, even when it is clear that the price of that stubbornness is disastrous - politically, militarily and economically.

The data is evident for all to see: After the Oslo agreements with the Palestinians were signed in 1993, a period of growth began in Israel, including unprecedented foreign investment. Unemployment dropped from 11 percent to a welcome low 6.5 percent - at a time when immigration from the former Soviet Union was at full swing and 200,000 foreign workers came to Israel. There was plenty of work for everyone. When Israel shows up on the TV screens as a terror-struck state, as it did during the 1996 terror attacks, the conflict over the Hasmonean Tunnel in Jerusalem under Benjamin Netanyahu's administration, and, of course, the last 16 months, the economic result is clear: recession and rising unemployment.

In the past year, it has become increasingly clear that it is impossible to conduct a normal economy while the state's resources are aimed at perpetuating the occupation and the settlements in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. The real remedy for the economic crisis will be found when Israel deals with the root causes of the conflict with the Palestinians. Only a determined effort to reach reconciliation between the two peoples, based on ending the occupation and the establishment of a Palestinian state beside the state of Israel, can result in peace and economic prosperity. By promising it can have the territories as well as peace, security and prosperity, the government is deceiving the public.

haaretz.co.il

But then again, there's still a ray of hope filtering through all that gloom-and-doom... At least one Israeli industry's thriving: Organized Crime is alive and kicking!

11 convicted in Paris fraud believed here

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By Michel Zlotowski January, 30 2002

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PARIS (January 30)
- Eleven of the 88 people who were found guilty, fined, and sentenced to up to seven years in jail at the end of the biggest fraud trial in France are believed to be in Israel. They are among 13 who were tried in absentia. Another 36 were acquitted.

The defendants were convicted for defrauding banks and insurance companies of 82 million euros in a case centered on Paris's mainly Jewish garment district. The fraud involved using fake invoices to secure bank loans in 1996 and 1997.

Wholesalers pretended to sell goods to a retailer in exchange for time bills. The bills were immediately discounted at a bank. The retailer then folded or vanished.

This apparently simple scheme was complicated by its size and the involvement of several bankers in France and Israel. According to the court, accommodation bills and fraudulent checks were sent from France to several Israeli banks, among them the First International Bank of Israel. The banks, in turn, discounted them at the French branch of the American Express bank and other banks, including Societe Generale, one of the largest French banks.

Discounting bills or checks is legal, but doing so with bad bills is not. Given the amount of money involved, the court said, some of the bankers must have been aware of the embezzlement. "They were going ahead because each such operation meant real profit for their bank," said an investigator.

Several lawyers criticized the heavy-handed attitude of the investigating judge, Isabelle Prévost-Deprez. She has been accused by some of those prosecuted of being motivated by anti-Semitism.

According to a conservative estimate, more than 75% of those found guilty are Jewish; some hold Israeli citizenship.

Haim Weizman, the man prosecutors said organized the fraud, was sentenced in absentia to seven years in prison. He is believed to be living in Israel.

The Paris judges rejected a plea from several banks, saying that it was impossible for the bankers to have been unaware of what was going on. Those banks will not be refunded for their losses.

jpost.com



To: D. Long who wrote (11708)2/21/2002 11:10:51 AM
From: Thomas M.  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 23908
 
Arabs had no problem with Jews in Jerusalem until the Zionists came along. In fact, the Jews in Jerusalem also hated the Zionists. They have always supported the PLO's call for a secular democratic state. Face it, the natives of all stripes have always hated these European invaders and their racist mindset.

Tom