
Siniša Mali, the former mayor of Belgrade and Serbia’s current finance minister, sent his children to an elite school where a year’s tuition cost far more than his official income.
He claimed that the fees were paid by “friends” from abroad. Reporters have found that the money flowed to the school through offshore companies — one of which Mali owned himself.
Standing alongside villas and embassies in a leafy district of the Serbian capital, the International School of Belgrade caters to the city’s elite. Annual tuition fees cost more than the salary of the city’s mayor.
But that did not stop Belgrade’s former mayor Siniša Mali — now Serbia’s finance minister and a close ally of President Aleksandar Vučić — from sending three of his children to the private day school, spending around $60,000 in tuition and fees annually at a time when he was making the equivalent of $1,000 per month.
In 2016, while still mayor, Mali told a court that he had been able to provide his children with the pricey education thanks to the generosity of foreign friends — although he declined to name them.
The private school expenses were “paid by my friends... friends I have met abroad and who have no ties to Serbia,” Mali told a judge, who was adjudicating a dispute between him and his ex-wife.
The comment caught the eye of Serbia’s anti-corruption agency, which opened a case and filed a report with prosecutors. The findings, however, never saw the light of day. Mali struck a deal with the prosecution, avoiding criminal charges and up to five years in prison by making a donation of $2,000 to charity. The case was shelved and forgotten.
But OCCRP and its Serbian partner KRIK can now reveal new details about how the Mali children’s school fees were paid.
The money arrived at the International School of Belgrade through three offshore companies — and their owners did, in some cases, have ties to Serbia, according to a confidential anti-corruption agency report KRIK obtained along with other documents and data.
Credit: KRIK
A confidential report from Serbia’s anti-corruption agency obtained by KRIK, naming the three offshore companies that paid the school fees.
The bulk of the money arrived from a British Virgin Islands company that Mali owned himself. It is unclear how that company was funded, and Mali did not respond to requests for comment.
In 2015, KRIK and OCCRP revealed that Mali played a role in that company. The following year, it stopped paying the Mali children’s school fees — but two other companies filled the gap. While reporters could not determine whether these companies had direct ties to Mali, both arrangements appear designed to conceal the source of the money used to pay the private school.
One of the companies, which is also registered in the British Virgin Islands, belonged to a Serbian businessman who told reporters his firm was used as an intermediary, keeping the true payer anonymous. He said he did not know where the money used for the school fees came from, since it was paid in cash to his financial services agent in Cyprus. (The agent denied any knowledge of the transaction). Even less is known about the third company, which is registered in Cyprus and whose ultimate owner is not publicly available.
Three different offshore companies paid the Mali children’s school fees from 2010 to 2017.
Dušan Spasojević, a Serbian political analyst and political science professor, said the findings were significant because Mali is one of the most important politicians in the ruling SNS party, and the payments to the school appear to have been designed to obscure their origin.
"This shows us how much money politicians have and the extent to which they try to hide it,” Spasojević said.
“It might be acceptable for a father to pay for his daughter’s or anyone else’s education, but of course we as the public are interested in where the money comes from, because it is certainly not part of what was reported to the [anti-corruption] agency and what can be reasonably concluded based on the salary of someone who has been in the government of the Republic of Serbia for, I don’t know how many, 10 years or 7-8 years,” he said.
This is not the first time Mali has come under scrutiny for a lifestyle that appeared out of step with his official income. OCCRP and KRIK previously revealed that he was the owner of two dozen apartments on Bulgaria’s coast, and that he deposited hundreds of thousands of dollars into bank accounts he and his family controlled. Even short holidays have greatly exceeded his income — a weekend trip he took to Rome in 2018 cost at least $8,500, which was nearly eight times his monthly salary as mayor at the time.
State institutions have launched two separate probes into Mali’s suspicious wealth, but in one case he cut a deal to avoid prosecution, while in another, a prosecutor declined to press charges. As Finance Minister, a role he has held since 2018, Mali now controls the Administration for the Prevention of Money Laundering, one of the bodies that had previously scrutinized him.
Cash From the Caribbean
Most of the school expenses — some $150,000 between 2010 and 2015 — were paid for by Alessio Investment Ltd, a company registered in the notoriously opaque jurisdiction of the British Virgin Islands.
Although the owners of companies there are not made public, OCCRP and KRIK in 2015 obtained a power-of-attorney document that revealed Mali had served as Alessio Investment’s director. Separately, it emerged in testimony related to a court case involving the Mali family that Mali was also the owner of Alessio Investment.
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Alessio Investment and the Mali Family
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