From the Eagle Watch #194
November 28, 2011
This message is  about DRC Democratic Republic of Congo where the people know all about  diamond cartels.   DRC is the 2nd poorest country in the world.  African  people are the Indigenous of Africa.
Kittoh
  From: "marksimonbrown" <mark@tlio.org.uk>
American  "vulture" investors, including a top funder of the Republican Party,  have demanded that African nations pay over half a billion dollars for  old debts – for which the investors paid only a few million for. One New  York vulture speculator, Peter Grossman of FG Capital Management, is  demanding $100 million from the Democratic Republic of Congo. Is he  collecting a legitimate debt from the Congo — or is the vulture's claim  based on a stolen security? Greg Palast reports from the Congo, Bosnia  and New York in the joint investigation by the BBC, the Guardian and  Democracy Now!
See: http://www.democracynow.org/2011/11/22/reporter_greg_palast_exposes_how_us 
Below:
 1). Vulture funds await Jersey decision on poor countries' debts
& also
2). Vultures feed when economies are turned into rotting carcasses
*********************************************
1).
 Vulture funds await Jersey decision on poor countries' debts
Pressure grows to end trade that has made $1bn for speculators but has been blamed for delaying recovery of war-torn countries
by Greg Palast, Maggie O'Kane and Chavala Madlena, The Guardian, Tuesday 15 November 2011
 Ref: http://www.guardian.co.uk/global-development/2011/nov/15/vulture-funds-jersey-decision-debts 
 [On  the above url, watch the video by Greg Palast in a special  investigation on vulture funds by Guardian Films and BBC Newsnight in  which Palast interviews Peter Grossman of FG Capital Management who  Palast tracks down outside his New York residence]
Link to this video: http://www.guardian.co.uk/global-development/video/2011/nov/15/financial-vultures-africa-jersey-video 
 
Jean  Ngaigy, the head of a school in Lepaigagone, interprets the words of  one of her six-year-old students. The girl is happy to have a school  now. Her favourite subjects are maths and French.
Like many  children in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, both the girl's  parents were killed in the country's civil war, which left up to 7.2  million people dead. Now, though, a fragile peace in the town, outside  the capital Kinshasa, means mines are reopening and the factory is  coming back to life. The school has been rebuilt and has running water.  In the DRC, that represents hope.
The DRC should be one of  Africa's richest countries. It has a mineral wealth estimated to be  around $24 trillion (£15tn). There are huge deposits of cobalt,  diamonds, gold, copper, oil and 80% of the world's supplies of coltan  ore – a valuable mineral used in computers and mobile phones.
Yet  100 women a week are still dying in childbirth and 16,000 children  under the age of five die every year. One in three children in the DRC  will never get anything more than primary education.
One of the  reasons the country has been unable to recover is that it is being  pursued by international debt speculators, known as vulture funds,  through offshore tax havens such as Jersey, for debts that were run up  during 30 years of war and civil war.
Vulture funds operate by  buying up a country's debt when it is in a state of chaos. When the  country has stabilised, vulture funds return to demand millions of  dollars in interest repayments and fees on the original debt. New York  vulture fund FG Hemisphere has gone to Jersey to claim $100m from the  DRC because a legal loophole means that the island remains free of  anti-vulture laws that were passed in the UK last year.
Jersey will decide next month whether to allow its courts to let the $100m go to FG Hemisphere.
It  has been 16 years since most of the world began writing off the debts  of the world's poorest countries, but the vulture funds, a club of  between 26 and 35 speculators, have ignored the debt concerts by pop  stars such as Bono and pleas from the likes of the World Bank and  International Monetary Fund to give the countries a break and a chance  to get back on their feet.
Congo-Brazzaville has been a  particularly fruitful target for vulture funds, being ravaged by  conflict but rich in natural resources. One of the earliest cases  against the country came in 1996 when $30m worth of Congolese sovereign  debt was purchased by Kensington International Inc, a subsidiary of the  well-established hedge fund Elliott Associates, headed by prominent  vulture financier Paul Singer.
Singer, a major contributor to the  Republican party, reportedly bought the debt at a significant discount  and began pursuing lawsuits against the impoverished African nation  through the world's courtrooms. Bloomberg has reported that  Congo-Brazzaville has spent an estimated $5m fighting Singer's lawsuits.  Finally in 2005 Kensington International was awarded $39m in the UK  high court.
So far, according to the World Bank, the top 26  vultures have managed to collect $1bn from the world's poorest countries  and still have a further $1.3bn to collect. Gordon Brown has described  the payouts as "morally outrageous".
The World Bank has described  vulture funds as "a threat to debt relief efforts" and the former,  Bush-era US treasury secretary Henry Paulson said: "I deplore what the  vulture funds are doing" in testimony before the House of  Representatives' financial committee in 2007.
In terms of public  donations, the impact of the vulture funds is huge. The $1bn collected  by the funds is equivalent to more than double the International  Committee of the Red Cross's entire budget for Africa in 2011. $1bn  could fund the entire UN appeal for the famine in Somalia and is more  than twice the amount of money raised by Save the Children last year.
Vulture  funds also scare off new investors, who the vultures will target their  investment, from a country. In the DRC, a large US company with plans to  invest millions in mining pulled out last year after one vulture sued  it as a result of its business with the DRC government.
It is  thought FG Hemisphere bought the debt for which it is claiming $100m in  the Jersey court for $3.3m, with the help of another vulture fund, Debt  Advisory International (DAI).
FG Hemisphere, headed by Peter  Grossman and DAI, run by Michael Sheehan – both men were former Morgan  Stanley consultants – have attempted to collect on the debt by suing DRC  state companies and their foreign investors.
When interviewed as  part of a joint investigation between Newsnight and the Guardian,  Grossman defending his involvement in the DRC, saying "he wasn't beating  up on the Congo but collecting on a legitimate debt". The last decade  has seen FG and DAI chase the DRC, for the same debt, in the United  States, Jersey, Hong Kong and Australia. In 2010, Britain passed a law  banning vulture funds from collecting in UK courts. But the legislation  failed to mention Jersey. Because Jersey is not specifically mentioned,  it is automatically excluded under British law, a loophole that FG  Hemisphere immediately exploited.
Grossman said it was not the  vultures whose activities needed to be investigated but mismanagement in  the DRC. He also denied having any knowledge that, as alleged by the  Bosnian police, the debt was acquired illegally in the first place.
Sheehan,  who is nicknamed Goldfinger, brokered the original deal with Bosnian  state company EnergoInvest and owns some of the debt. The DRC originally  owed the money to EnergoInvest for a contract to build power lines.
But  as Grossman looks for payment from DRC through the Jersey legal system,  the world's biggest charities, including Oxfam, Christian Aid and  Jubilee Debt Campaign UK, are appealing to Jersey to close the loophole.
Jubilee  Debt Campaign UK, which has been campaigning for debt relief for over a  decade, is sending a representative to Jersey next week to put the case  directly to the island's government to close the vulture funds'  loophole.
Tim Jones, of Jubilee Debt Campaign, said: "The DRC is  the second poorest country in the world. The country desperately needs  to be able to use its rich resources to alleviate poverty, not squander  them on paying unjust debts to vulture funds left by the dictator Joseph  Mobutu. Jersey has to shut vulture funds down."
UK legislation  on vulture funds has already had an impact, when Liberia last year  reached agreement to repay just over 3% of the face value of a $43m  debt.
That case was originally brought by two Caribbean-based  vulture funds, Hamsah Investments and Wall Capital Ltd, over a debt  dating back to the 1970s and it sparked a furore when the high court  ordered Liberia to repay the full debt in 2009. Liberia mobilised debt  campaigners, who pushed for a change in the law, resulting in the Debt  Relief (Developing Countries) Act 2010 being passed.
The law, a  world first, requires commercial creditors to comply with the terms of  international debt cancellation schemes, which specify a single discount  rate for creditors to ensure equal treatment.
The law applies to  the UK courts and ensures that public money given towards debt  cancellation is not diverted to private investors.
The World Bank  estimates that more than one-third of the countries which have  qualified for Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) debt relief have  been targeted by vulture funds. HIPC countries are those whose debt is  unsustainable and qualify for loans from the World Bank's International  Development Association or the IMF's poverty reduction and growth  facility.
The Democratic Republic of the Congo is poised on the  edge of a fragile peace but elections later this month could again  destabilise the country. Having spent $5m fighting off the vulture  funds, the DRC is waiting for news from 4,000 miles away, where Jersey  will decide whether the vultures will get their money.
Additional reporting by the Centre for Investigative Reporting in Sarajevo, Josh Strauss and Nicolas Niarchos
• This article was amended on 22 November 2011 to correct two references from the DRC to Congo-Brazzaville. 
 
2).
Vultures feed when economies are turned into rotting carcasses
by Greg Palast, The Guardian, Wednesday 16 November 2011 
Ref: http://www.guardian.co.uk/global-development/poverty-matters/2011/nov/16/vultures-feed-economies-rotting-carcasses 
 
The  vulture funds circling the debts of poorer countries are feeding after  economies have been looted at the behest of the World Bank, IMF and  privateers
If God doesn't give a rat's arse about "The Vulture", and what he does for a living, and what he's done to Africa, why should I?
The  thought struck me while sitting here, coffee getting cold, in my old  Toyota, trying to look invisible, staked out in front of 300 De Kalb  Avenue, in Brooklyn, New York. It's just after dawn and I'm hoping that  Peter Grossman, a Wall Street star, will pop out of his posh brownstone  for a jog or a cup of coffee. Then I can jump him. He's on the lookout  for me because I'd already jumped his acquaintance, Goldfinger, the man  who's making Grossman stunningly rich.
Grossman's riches, nearly  $100m for his firm, FG Management, come from the Democratic Republic of  the Congo. I was just there in Congo, two days before this stakeout, at a  cholera quarantine centre in the capital, Kinshasa.
Besides lots  of cholera, Congo has lots of cobalt. Grossman has, through a crazy  legal loophole in British law, waylaid a payment of $80m to the African  government for a shipment of cobalt from a government-owned mine.
Grossman  is a "vulture", the name Wall Street gives, with an affectionate smile,  to those who can get their hands on old, forgotten debts of desperately  poor nations – Congo, Zambia, Peru and Liberia are cases I've  investigated – that they pick up for pennies on the pound of face value.
When  – usually after a Bono concert – western nations forgive debts owed by  these poor countries, the nation receiving this aid is now ripe enough,  and flush enough, for attack by a vulture, who demands many a pound of  flesh for the debt he suddenly brandishes.
In Grossman's case,  his company paid about $3m for a debt Zaire (now Congo) owed Yugoslavia  (now Bosnia). A court on the tiny island of Jersey, a tax haven in the  Channel, has ordered Congo to turn over the $80m it has in a bank  account there, the payment for the cobalt. Furthermore, Congo must pay  an additional $20m to Grossman if the country can find the money.
If  that seems nuts to you, it is. The UK and other nations bar collections  by vultures against poor countries where western government treasuries  have agreed to give up their own claims. However, Grossman was free to  sue Congo in Jersey, a pseudo-colony of Britain, because the UK  parliament failed to include the words, "and Jersey" in its anti-vulture  law.
How did Grossman got his hands on Congo's debt to Bosnia? That's what I was waiting in the Brooklyn cold to ask him.
Here's  what I can piece together. Only three days before I was in the Congo  cholera clinic, I was in the office of the chief of financial police in  Sarajevo, Bosnia. With the help of the Centre for Investigative  Reporting in Bosnia, we tracked down the police report asserting that  the nation's own prime minister had slipped control of the debt to one  Michael Sheehan, aka Goldfinger who, for a fee, passed it from the  Bosnia state power company to Grossman. The Bosnian police chief told me  this little business with the Congo debt was a crime, and the (now  former) prime minister, Nedzad Brankovic, should be in prison. Yet, to  date, prosecutors have not acted.
I got to the man who blew the  whistle on Brankovic, Brigadier General Izet Spahic. He'd worked out a  deal for the Bosnia power company (desperately broke) to make power  pylons for Congo (desperately broke). The project would generate  electricity, clean water and profits for both nations.
It was  quite a heart-warming story of two nations coming out of civil wars,  with a combined total of 4 million dead, helping each other. But when it  was discovered that The Vulture in Brooklyn had control of the debt  between the nations, the electricity deal was off.
I went by the  Bosnia pylon-making factory. It was now shut and its several thousand  workers were gone. At least there's no cholera.
The brigadier  general was furious: how could these people think about making a profit  off civil war, poverty and unimaginable suffering? When do humans grow  feathers and claws?
It's a question I'm going to ask Grossman  when he comes out because the Guardian and BBC Newsnight want me to ask  it. For me, The Vulture's answer is inconsequential to the bigger  picture.
I assume that after we break our story, parliament will  move to close the loophole it so glaringly left open to The Vulture; and  the US Congress will at least pretend to consider anti-vulture  legislation, now languishing in some committee.
But I think the  focus on Grossman and his fellow carrion chewers is distracting. The  destruction of Bosnia's power-pylon industry was the direct consequence  of privatising it, bringing the free market to socialist Yugoslavia and  Brankovic to power over its debts, allowing him to buy and sell debt  securities on the deregulated world financial market.
It was the  privatisation of Congo's state cobalt mine and the looting of its  riches, all at the behest of the World Bank, IMF and privateers, that  drained Congo's treasury.
Grossman is just the repo man, the last  of the financial carnivores who've bitten into Congo and Bosnia – and  Greece and Detroit.
Grossman's vulture operation is just over the  bridge from Occupied Wall Street, which was occupied at the bottom by  protesters, "the 99%", and is occupied at the top by "the 1%", those who  kill economies for a profit.
It's easy to target Grossman. But  vultures can only feast when the system kills, when, for easy profits,  economies are turned into rotting carcasses.
 
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