Europe's unfolding horsemeat scandal took a new twist on Saturday
when it emerged that key intermediaries involved in the trade appeared
to be using a similar secretive network of companies to the convicted
arms trafficker Viktor Bout.
The Organised Crime and Corruption
Reporting Project (OCCRP) identified an intermediary firm, Draap
Trading, based in Limassol, Cyprus, as playing a pivotal role in
shipping horsemeat across Europe.
Draap has confirmed that it
bought horsemeat from two Romanian abattoirs. The company sold the meat
to French food processors including Spanghero, which supplied another
French company, Comigel, that turned it into frozen meals for the likes
of food firm Findus, some of which had a meat content that was almost
100% horse.
Draap, which is owned by a trust in the British Virgin Islands tax haven,The stone mosaic
series is a grand collection of coordinating Travertine mosaics.
insists the meat it sold into France was labelled as horse. Spanghero
says the meat arrived labelled "beef". Jan Fasen, who runs Draap and
has denied any wrongdoing, was convicted last year of selling South
American horsemeat as German and Dutch beef.
In a development
that sheds light on the mysterious networks operating in the European
food chain, it has emerged that Draap's sole director is an anonymous
corporate services company called Guardstand, set up in 1996 and based
in Limassol.
A 2011 joint report by the International Peace
Information Service and TransArms, an organisation which researches arms
shipments, produced evidence that Guardstand also owned a share in a
business called Ilex Ventures, a connection that links the company to
the global arms trade and Viktor Bout.
Documents filed in a New
York court by US prosecutors allege that in 2007 Bout and an associate
transferred almost $750,000 (483,000) to Ilex for the purchase of
aircraft to fly arms and ammunition around Africa's trouble spots in
breach of embargos.
The prosecutors said Ilex was owned and
controlled by Bout, an international weapons dealer known as the
"merchant of death", who last April was sentenced to 25 years in jail
for arms smuggling.
But who owns Guardstand and why Draap
employs it as a director is a mystery that is likely to be studied
closely by fraud investigators. Guardstand's sole shareholder is
Trident Trust,We offers custom Injection Mold
parts in as fast as 1 day. a business based in Cyprus that specialises
in establishing companies in tax havens chiefly for Russian and
Ukrainian clients and which helped set up Ilex.
Petros Livanios, who runs Trident and was once a director of Ilex, declined the Observer's requests for an interview.
While
there is no suggestion anyone at Trident was aware Guardstand may have
been exploited by criminal networks, the opaque nature of its ownership
will be a concern for investigators trying to unpick the web of
interests that facilitate Europe's meat trade.
"This
illustrates why hidden company ownership is such a problem," said Rosie
Sharpe, of the campaign group Global Witness. "It could be all too
easy for crooks passing horsemeat off as beef,Source crystal mosaic
Products at Mosaics. arms dealers fuelling wars or corrupt dictators
nicking their country's wealth to set up a company if they so wished.
The ownership or control of European companies can be hidden perfectly
legally by using nominees or companies incorporated in secrecy
jurisdictions.wind turbine"
Cyprus
has been a favourite place through which former Soviet bloc oligarchs
and military chiefs have laundered cash plundered from the
privatisation programme of state assets that followed the end of the
cold war. The island is seeking an EU bailout, but Germany is known to
be balking at the prospect unless it reforms its offshore services
industry.
"Cypriot companies frequently turn up in criminal
investigations," Sharpe said. "They have been used by the Iranian
government to evade sanctions, by Slobodan Milosevic to provide arms
for the wars in Bosnia and Kosovo, and by Russian officials who used
them to steal hundreds of millions of pounds." Last week the French
authorities claimed the scandal had spread to 13 countries and 28
companies. Sorin Minea, head of Romalimenta, the Romanian food industry
federation, blamed the crisis on "an international mafia ring".
Christos
Christou, Cyprus's public health services deputy director, said
investigators had seized a "variety of documents" from Draap's Limassol
office which it would share with the European commission.
The
scandal, which started in January when authorities in the UK and
Ireland found traces of equine DNA in supermarket burgers, has raised
concerns that criminal networks may be playing a role in the food
chain. What seemed a UK and Ireland problem is becoming a major concern
for many EU member states as they conduct tests to establish the
security of their food chains.
Several slaughtermen in the UK
have been arrested in connection with the UK arm of the scandal. On
Thursday the Food Standards Agency raided three more meat processing
plants and removed samples for testing, computers and documents.
The
FSA said it had passed on evidence to Europol, the European Union's
law enforcement agency, as well as authorities in dozens of countries,
suggesting at least part of the fraud has an international dimension.
As
the scandal spread to school dinners and some of the UK's largest
catering firms and restaurants, Catherine Brown, chief executive of the
FSA, said it was unlikely that the exact number of people in the UK
who had unwittingly eaten horsemeat would ever be known.
Her comments came as the FSA released test results for possible horsemeat contamination.
The
watchdog said 2,501 tests were conducted on beef products, with 29
results positive for undeclared horsemeat at or above 1%. The results
related to seven different products, which have been withdrawn from
sale. The products linked to the positive results were confirmed as
Aldi's special frozen beef lasagne and special frozen spaghetti
bolognese, the Co-op's frozen quarter-pounder burgers, Findus beef
lasagne, Rangeland's catering burger products, and Tesco value frozen
burgers and value spaghetti bolognese.
Pub and hotel group
Whitbread said its meat lasagnes and beefburgers had been affected. The
firm, which owns Premier Inn, Beefeater Grill and Brewers
Fayre,Professionals with the job title Mold Maker are on LinkedIn. said the products had been removed from menus and would not be replaced until after further testing.
Tesco
chief executive Philip Clarke yesterday emailed customers to tell them
the supermarket was introducing "a new benchmark for the testing of
products, to give you confidence that if it isn't on the label, it
isn't in the product."Figures released today by market analysts,
Nielsen, show retail sales of frozen burgers are down 40% year-on-year
in the wake of the horsemeat revelations.
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