(October 16,
2012, Geneva, Sri Lanka Guardian) Switzerland has blocked nearly 1 billion
Swiss francs (HK$8.35 billion) in assets linked to former autocratic Middle
Eastern leaders since the Arab Spring, the Swiss foreign ministry said.
The Swiss
government has held funds linked to ousted Tunisian dictator Zine El Abidine
Ben Ali since he left the country in January 2011, and those of ousted Egyptian
president Hosni Mubarak after his departure from power the same year, said
Valentin Zellweger, the head of the foreign ministry's international law
department.
Switzerland had
blocked some 700 million Swiss francs from Egypt and 60 million from Tunisia,
and was currently working with the new administrations in those countries to
find a way to return the funds to the Egyptian and Tunisian people, Zellweger
told reporters in Geneva.
Following
separate United Nations Security Council resolutions, Switzerland had also
blocked 100 million Swiss francs from Libya and another 100 million from Syria,
Zellweger said.
Asked why the
restitution of funds to Tunisia and Egypt was taking so long, he said the onus
was on those nations, since “it is them who determine the speed of the
procedures. Switzerland is confronted in Egypt and Tunisia with cases
unprecedented in size,'' Zellweger said.
In Tunisia's
case, Switzerland held the accounts of 48 people close to Ben Ali, while 32
people linked to Mubarak had their holdings frozen in the Egyptian case, he
explained, adding that each account had registered between 250 and 2,000
separate transactions.
When asked about
the relatively modest amount of frozen Tunisian funds, Zellweger said there were
two possible explanations: