The Sassou-Ngueso family, which has ruled Congo for nearly 40 years, has been embroiled in another controversy, this time, involving alleged money laundering.
The daughter of the president of Congo-Brazzaville allegedly misappropriated public funds to buy a luxury apartment in the Donald Trump residential and hotel complex in New York, said the Global Witness, an anti-corruption NGO.
To appropriate the apartment, she allegedly called on an intermediary, the Portuguese businessman Veiga, who is also a representative of Asperbras, a Brazilian construction giant that is making inroads in Brazzaville since Brazil helped clear the debt of Congo.
Asperbras would later transfer subsidiary funds to a subsidiary, notably in the British Virgin Islands, a well-known tax haven, Global Witness said.
It explained that the money was funnelled through Cyprus, the British Virgin Islands, and Delaware after being withdrawn from the Congolese treasury. Trump International Realty, owned by the Trump Organization, brokered the sale, according to documents reviewed by the NGO.
It added that an international law firm and a front company, with headquarters in Cyprus, were also involved in the transaction.
Veiga had, in 2017, said that the apartment was owned by a company where he was a shareholder. He said the apartment was financed by him alone and “has nothing to do with third parties, namely the family of the President of Congo.”
Yet, a letter Veiga wrote to the Trump International board read: “This letter is sent to you on behalf of my good friend, Lauren Anne Marie Ikia Lemboumba, who have [sic] applied to purchase an apartment in Trump International Hotel & Tower Condominium.”
Lauren Anne Marie Ikia Lemboumba is the 17-year-old daughter of Claudia Sassou-Nguesso, according to Global Witness.
The purchase occurred two years before Trump was elected president. Global Witness said the Trump Organization should “clarify the source of the payments for condominium maintenance of apartment 32G since May 2015 as well as Donald Trump’s role in these companies.”
A Trump Organization spokesperson has, however, told The New York Times that the apartment was purchased from a third party unrelated to the Trump Organization. It said any building fees paid by the owner go toward maintenance and “are not fees paid to Trump for profit.”
Yet, Global Witness investigator Peter Jones told Quartz that the deal “has all the hallmarks of money laundering.”