November 10, 2003.
Yasser Arafat diverted nearly $1 billion in public funds to insure his political
survival, but a lot more is unaccounted for.
Jim Prince and a team of American accountants – hired by Arafat’s own finance
ministry – are combing through Arafat’s books. Given what they’ve already
uncovered, Arafat may be rethinking the decision. Lesley Stahl reports.
“What is Mr. Arafat and the Palestinian Authority worth today?” asks
accountant Jim Prince. “Who is controlling that money? Where is that money?
How do we get it back?”
So far, Prince’s team has determined that part of the Palestinian leader’s wealth
was in a secret portfolio worth close to $1 billion — with investments in
companies like a Coca-Cola bottling plant in Ramallah, a Tunisian cell phone
company and venture capital funds in the U.S. and the Cayman Islands.
Although the money for the portfolio came from public funds like Palestinian
taxes, virtually none of it was used for the Palestinian people; it was all
controlled by Arafat. And, Prince says, none of these dealings were made
public.
“Our whole point is to bring it out of control of any one person,” Prince
says.
That’s what happened with the portfolio money, which is now under the control
of Salam Fayyad, a former World Bank official who Arafat was forced to
appoint finance minister last year after crowds began protesting his corrupt
regime.
According to Fayyad, “There is corruption out there. There is abuse.
There is impropriety, and that’s what had to be fixed.”
Statements like that have earned Fayyad, a bookish technocrat who spent 20
years in the U.S., a reputation for courage – which was enhanced when he
immediately posted the details of Arafat’s secret portfolio on the Internet.
Fayyad’s investigators are treading softly, well aware that their probe may
become too embarrassing for Arafat.
Has he tried to stop them? “We run into obstacles in a number of places,
particularly among the old PLO types,” Prince says, adding one might draw their
own conclusions as to whether his statement includes Arafat himself.
Martin Indyk, a top adviser on the Middle East in the Clinton administration and
now head of the Saban Center, a Washington think-tank, says Arafat was
always traveling the world, looking for handouts. Money, he says, is “essential”
to Arafat’s survival.
“Arafat for years would cry poor, saying, ‘I can’t pay the salaries, we’re gonna
have a disaster here, the Palestinian economy is going to collapse,'” says Indyk.
“And we would all mouth those words: ‘The Palestinian economy is going to
collapse if we don’t do something about this.’ But at the same time, he’s
accumulating hundreds of millions of dollars.”
The stockpile went well beyond the portfolio. Arafat accumulated another $1
billion with the help of — of all people — the Israelis. Under the Oslo Accords, it
was agreed that Israel would collect sales taxes on goods purchased by
Palestinians and transfer those funds to the Palestinian treasury. But instead,
Indyk says, “that money is transferred to Yasser Arafat to, amongst other
places, bank accounts which he maintains off-line in Israel.”
Until three years ago, Israel put the tax revenues into Arafat’s account at Bank
Leumi in downtown Tel Aviv, no questions asked. But why?
According to Indyk, “The Israelis came to us and said, basically, ‘Arafat’s job is
to clean up Gaza. It’s going to be a difficult job. He needs walking-around
money,’ because the assumption was that he would use it to get control of all
of these terrorists who’d been operating in these areas for decades.”
Obviously, that hasn’t happened. No one knows this better than Dennis Ross,
who was Middle East negotiator for the first President Bush and President
Clinton, and now heads the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. He says
Arafat’s “walking-around money” financed a vast patronage system.
“I used to see that people came in, you know, with their requests,” Ross
says. “‘I need a phone. I need an operation. I need a job.’ Arafat had money to
dispense.”
Like a Chicago ward boss, he still doles out oodles of money; Fayyad says he
pays his security forces alone $20 million a month, all of it in cash.
All told, U.S. officials estimate Arafat’s personal nest egg at between $1 billion
and $3 billion.
Arafat may have $1 billion, but he sure isn’t spending it to live well. He’s holed
up in his Ramallah compound, which the Israelis all but reduced to rubble a
year-and-a-half ago. Arafat has always lived modestly, which you can’t say
about his wife, Suha. According to Israeli officials, she gets $100,000 a month
from Arafat out of the Palestinian budget, and lives lavishly in Paris on this
allowance.
He also uses the money to bolster his own standing. Both Israeli and U.S.
sources say those recent outpourings of support at Arafat’s compound were
“rent-a-rallies,” and that Arafat has spent millions to support terrorists and
purchase weapons.
Did he steal from his own people?
“He defines himself as being the embodiment of the Palestinian people,” Ross
answers. “So what’s good for him is good for them. Did they benefit? The
answer is no. Did they lose? The answer is yes.”
Palestinians certainly paid dearly for something else Fayyad uncovered: a
system of monopolies in commodities — like flour and cement — that Arafat
handed out to his cronies, who then turned around and fleeced the public.
Fayyad says it could accurately be seen as gouging his own people. “And
especially in Gaza which is poorer, which is something that is totally
unacceptable and immoral, actually.”
Of all the monopolies, none was as lucrative or as corrupt as the General
Petroleum Corporation, the one for gasoline. The corporation took the fuel it
purchased from an Israeli company and watered it down with kerosene, not
only defrauding the Palestinian drivers, but wrecking their car engines.
Fayyad says the Petroleum Corporation charged exorbitant prices, and Arafat
got a hefty kickback. “To the president, I can tell you, if there was not money
in the treasury, he went to the Petroleum Corporation.”
When Fayyad dismantled the corporation, the man who had run it fled to
California. Ever since, with the monopoly broken up, Palestinian drivers have
paid 20 percent less for gas and 80 percent less for diesel fuel. Gas stations
now advertise 100 percent pure products.
Fayyad became a hero, like the Robin Hood of the Palestinians. Millions of
people were affected by this one move.
He says he was just doing his job. “A lot of this is about, you know,
distinguishing between right and wrong. And that’s a straightforward
proposition.”
Mohammed Rachid, Arafat’s economic adviser who set up his tangled web of
investments and monopolies, says he’s cooperating with Fayyad’s
investigators. Rachid left the Palestinian territories about a year ago under a
cloud. He asked CBS News not to reveal where we met him for his first
television interview.
“I’m proud of what I did till now,” Rachid says. “I think I showed a good
performance.”
He’s referring to the investment portfolio he managed for Arafat. He also
opened that account at the Leumi Bank in Tel Aviv. According to a recent
report by the International Monetary Fund, that secret account was: “Under the
control of President Arafat and his financial adviser Mohammed Rachid” — and
no one else.
“If we are having a secret account, we should have it in Israel? You
think this is logical?” Rachid asks.
But that’s what the Israelis, and the people working for Fayyad, say it was.
Rachid says that “transfers to Leumi Bank account never stayed. It was
receiving the revenues and transferring the revenues to the Palestinian
Authority’s account in the Arab bank in Gaza.”
He’s saying the Leumi money was sent to the Palestinian Authority. But, in
fact, much of it was sent to Switzerland, to the prestigious Lombard Odier
Bank, for yet another secret investment account that held over $300 million. In
a letter obtained by CBS News, Rachid tells the bank that the funds will come
from Palestinian “taxes” and “customs revenues.”
“It was all under the name of the Palestinian authorities,” Rachid says. Doesn’t
he mean Arafat? “No, Palestinian Authorities, Palestinian Authorities.”
Actually, it was under a code name, “Ledbury” — not the Palestinian Authority
— and Minister Fayyad says that this pot of money, too, was available only to
Arafat. The Swiss account was closed out in 2001. No one really knows where
that money is today.
Does Rachid think that it should have gone, in some way, back to help the
Palestinian people?
“Of course,” he says. But, “I don’t, I don’t decide what we do with the
money.”
Those who want to know why Arafat didn’t bring the money back, he says,
should ask him. But Arafat didn’t want to talk.
There’s yet another stash of money Arafat might be asked about: the funds he
collected when he was chairman of the PLO in exile. The PLO’s former
treasurer told us he saw Saddam Hussein hand Arafat a $50 million check for
supporting him during the first Gulf War. And there were other large gifts from
the KGB and the Saudis.
Ross says, “Arafat used to say to me, ‘Where’s my money? You need to go to
the Saudis and get my money.’ It was never the Palestinians’ money.”
Fayyad is trying to make sure it’s the people’s money, but many say his
one-man reform effort is having only limited success. Arafat recently sent
armed men to prevent Fayyad from replacing the head of the civil service, who
runs Arafat’s patronage apparatus. That has lead some to think Fayyad himself
could be in danger.
“He cannot know, and we cannot know at what point he crosses the red line,”
says Indyk.
Other people who have dared to call for transparency of all these finances have
been beaten up, shot, and silenced. Why is Fayyad surviving? Indyk says, “We
should not take it for granted.”
He has upset so many powerful people, and his offices have already been
ransacked more than once. But Fayyad says he does not feel threatened.
“It’s a dangerous neighborhood,” he admits. “But you know this is about, you
know, doing the right thing for the people.”