Bekräftat: Preems ägare fri efter ett år i fångenskap
Svenska oljebolaget Preems ägare Mohammed al-Amoudi har släppts fri efter att ha varit frihetsberövad i Saudiarabien i nästan 15 månader. Det bekräftar Preems presschef Niclas Brantingson för DN och Expressen.
– Han ska ha släppts för några timmar sedan och talat med sin familj och andra, säger Brantingson till DN.
Tidigare under söndagen uppgav källor för etiopisk stats-tv och Reuters att al-Amoudi släppts fri.
I november 2017 greps saudisk-etiopiske al-Amoudi tillsammans med andra saudiska affärsmän och prinsar i vad som av kronprins Mohammed bin Salmans styre kallats ett tillslag mot korruption.
Läs också
bakgrund
2017 års saudiarabiska utrensning
Wikipedia (en)
A number of prominent Saudi Arabian princes, government ministers, and business people were arrested in Saudi Arabia on 4 November 2017 and the following few weeks after the creation of an anti-corruption committee led by Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman (also known as MbS).
There are three alternate hypotheses regarding the motives behind the purge: a genuine corruption crackdown, a project to gain money, or preparing to take over the crown.The detainees were confined at the Ritz-Carlton hotel in Riyadh (which hosted the announcement for the planned city of Neom on 24 October 2017), which subsequently stopped accepting new bookings and told guests to leave. Private jets were also grounded to prevent suspects from fleeing the country.The arrests resulted in the final sidelining of the faction of the late King Abdullah and MbS's complete consolidation of control of all three branches of the security forces, making him the most powerful man in Saudi Arabia since his grandfather, the first King, Ibn Saud.As many as 500 people were rounded up in the sweep. Saudi Arabian banks froze more than 2,000 domestic accounts as part of the crackdown. According to the Wall Street Journal, the Saudi government targeted cash and assets worth up to $800 billion. The Saudi authorities claimed that amount was composed of assets worth around $300 billion to $400 billion that they can prove was linked to corruption.Attorney General Sheikh Saud Al Motjeb said in a statement that the arrests were "merely the start of a vital process to root out corruption wherever it exists." He added that those detained would have access to legal counsel and pledges to hold trials "in a timely and open manner." Meanwhile, King Salman appointed 26 new judges.MbS stated that "We show them all the files that we have and as soon as they see those about 95 percent agree to a settlement...About 1 percent are able to prove they are clean and their case is dropped right there. About 4 percent say they are not corrupt and with their lawyers want to go to court." When asked about reports of cash and assets totaling $800 billion that belong to the people accused of corruption, the official said, "Even if we get 100 billion back, that would be good."
bakgrund
Mohammed al-Amoudi
Wikipedia (sv)
Mohammed Hussein Al-Amoudi, född i Dese i Etiopien, är etiopisk-saudisk affärsman.
Mohammed Al-Amoudi växte upp i Weldiya i Etiopien som son till en etiopisk mor och en jemenitisk far. Han flyttade till Saudiarabien 1965 och har nu dubbelt medborgarskap. Basen för hans verksamhet är Corral Petroleum Holdings, Midroc Europe (MIDROC = Mohammed International Development Research and Organization Companies), Midroc Ethiopia Investment Group och ABV Rock Group. Han har betydande affärsintressen i Sverige, Etiopien och Marocko. Forbes uppskattade 2006 hans förmögenhet till 6,9 miljarder dollar Forbes uppskattade att hans förmögenhet (mars 2015) var över $10.8 miljarder USD. Han äger bland annat lyxjakten Queen of Sheba, som är 34 meter lång och som färdigställdes år 2006. Lyxjakten ska, enligt tidningen Affärsvärlden, ha kostat 130 miljoner kronor att bygga.
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