MAC: Mines and Communities

Steinmetz losing his sparkle as corruption allegations mount

Published by MAC on 2017-08-17
Source: Balkan Insight

Notorious diamantaire Beny Steinmetz, who gained his fortune through diamond exploitation in Africa, has been arrested in Israel, charged with money laundering and other offences, including implementing a deal with Romania's  Prince Paul Philippe that allegedly cost the state 150 million euros. (see also: Steinmetz investigated in illegal royal restitution case in Romania 

He's still facing allegations of corruption in Guinea when trying to acquire control of the Simandou iron ore deposits - a lengthy and steamy battle in which some of Rio Tinto's former top elite are now also involved. (See: London Calling on Rio Tinto and its corrupt elite).

None of which augurs well for his attempts to  persuade Romania's citizenry that he's a sufficiently  honest guy to be allowed control of the country's Rosia Montana gold project, through his partially-owned Canadian outfit. Gabriel Resources. (see: Rosia Montana protected by its historical status).

For more background on Steinmetz see: http://moneytometal.org/index.php/BSG

Balkan Mining Tycoon Arrested for Alleged Graft

Ana Maria Touma

Balkan Insight

14 August 2017

Billionaire Benjamin Steinmetz, the owner of two iron and gold mining companies in the Balkans, who is wanted by anti-graft prosecutors in Romania, has been arrested in Israel for alleged money laundering.

Israeli billionaire Benjamin Steinmetz, who has strong business ties to the Balkans, was detained for questioning alongside three other businessmen on Monday for allegedly using fake contracts to move and launder money in connection with an iron-mining operation in Guinea.

The homes and offices of some of the men were raided by law enforcement officers on Monday morning, according to Israeli newspaper Haaretz.

One of Steinmetz’s associates, political advisor Tal Silberstein, who was close to former Romanian president Traian Basescu, former Prime Minister Adrian Nastase and former Prime Minister Calin Popescu Tariceanu, is also among the detained businessmen, according to Israeli media.

Silberstein has also advised politicians in Austria.

Steinmetz, who owns the Cunico Resources ferro-nickel mining company which operates in Macedonia and Kosovo as well as Gabriel Resources, a gold-mining company seeking to reopen a mine in Romania, was also arrested in December 2016 for his suspected role in a sprawling corruption case involving tens of millions of dollars linked to iron exploitation in Guinea.

He denied the charges.

Steinmetz, Silberstein and Israili politician Yitzhak Rabin’s former chief of staff Shimon Sheves are wanted in corruption cases involving high-ranking dignitaries in Romania.

They are on trial in absentia in Bucharest for their alleged involvement in a large real estate scam in the northern suburbs of the capital Bucharest.

Romanian organised crime and anti-corruption prosecutors say that the deal between the Israeli businessmen and Prince Paul Philippe of Romania has cost the state some 150 million euros.

According to the indictment submitted to the court in 2016 by anti-graft prosecutors, the Israeli businessmen allegedly set up a criminal group that bribed Romanian officials to assign large real estate in North Bucharest to Paul Philippe of Romania, also indicted in the case, who falsely claimed the property belonged to his family before the communist regime took over.

Steinmetz allegedly financed the scam.

Steinmetz and Silberstein have also been investigated by the Romanian organized crime prosecutors in link with a cyber-identity theft.

Another Israeli citizen, Ron Weiner, has been sentenced to two years and eight months after spying on National Anti-Corruption Directorate chief prosecutor Laura Condruta Kovesi.

Steinmetz is one of the richest people in the world, according to Forbes magazine.

He is also behind Canadian-based Gabriel Resources, the company that recently sued the Romanian state for withdrawing its license to mine for gold in Rosia Montana, a village in the Western Carpathians believed to host the biggest unexploited gold deposit in Europe. However, under pressure from environmentalists worried by the company’s plans to use poisonous cyanide in the extraction process, the Romanian government stopped the project in 2014.

The Israeli billionaire is also the owner of ferronickel giant Cunico Resources, which operates two major production facilities in the Balkans - the FENI Industries plant in Macedonia and the NewCo Ferronikeli ferronickel mining complex in Kosovo.
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