The U.K.’s National Crime Agency successfully argued in a High Court case in London that accounts at the Banque Internationale à Luxembourg were used to move millions from a high profile embezzlement case in Azerbaijan into expensive properties.
Accounts at a major Luxembourg bank played a “central” role in moving funds from an embezzlement scheme that led to the imprisonment of the former chairman of the International Bank of Azerbaijan, Jahangir Hajiyev, according to the U.K.’s National Crime Agency (NCA).
The claim by the NCA sheds light on how tens of millions of dollars stolen from Azerbaijan’s most important state-owned bank ended up in the heart of Europe — and were used to fund a property-buying spree by Hajiyev and his family.
The evidence presented by the NCA was given in a sworn statement in June 2023 to support its claim for the forfeiture of high-value U.K. properties belonging to Hajiyev’s wife, including a luxury London townhouse and a golf club in Berkshire. The court “concluded that the properties were purchased as a result of criminal activity” in August, the NCA said in a statement, and Hajiyeva agreed to the forfeiture of the properties. The court did not make a ruling on the Luxembourg bank’s alleged role in the scheme.
A 242-page witness statement from an NCA investigator, obtained by OCCRP, lays out evidence that almost all the funds the Hajiyev family used to buy the golf club came from an account at Banque Internationale à Luxembourg. The account was held by VES Consultancy, a company owned by an Azerbaijan-born French citizen that was “at the heart of” large-scale laundering of funds stolen from the International Bank of Azerbaijan (IBA) and funneled into Europe, the NCA said.
The Baku Connection
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