Offshore companies: The Brotherhood’s economic empire

Members of the banned Muslim
Brotherhood group had secretly opened offshore bank accounts in countries and
islands practice money laundering activities such as Cyprus, Costa Rica,
Panama, Singapore, Bahamas, Bermuda and Virgin Islands.
Offshore
banks are oversea banks locate in countries with low taxes; they do not subject
to the international financial censorship and usually linked to the black
market, organized crime through tax evasion and money laundering.
Since
offshore banks associate with secret economy, tax evasion and concealment of
clients' money resources, Brotherhood group has largely built its economy on
the offshore banks of the Bahamas, which was subjected to quick investigations
after the September 11 attacks.
The US
Treasury Department had previously announced that the Brotherhood's Al Taqwa
and Akeida banks were involved in funding fundamentalist groups, including
Hamas, the Islamic Salvation Front, the Armed Islamic Group in Algeria, and the
Tunisian Nahda movement, In addition to al-Qaeda.
Also, the CIA
revealed that Al Taqwa and other financial institutions of the Muslim
Brotherhood were used to fund Al-Qaeda, and help ship arms and encrypted phones
to terrorist organizations. By October 2000, the U.S.Treasury accused Al Taqwa
Bank of providing a secret credit line to an associate close to Osama bin
Laden, the former al Qaeda leader. By late September 2001, Osama bin Laden and
al-Qaeda had received financial assistance from Youssef Nada, the largest
financier of Brotherhood activities, according to the accusations.
Nada has a
network of relationships with many western leaders in the world. He started his
business by establishing Al Taqwa Bank in 1988 to be the first Islamic
bank with a capital of more than US $ 258 million. in Europe.
Structures of Terrorism Funding
On October 7,
2002, Washington Post published a report on the Muslim Brotherhood’s economy. It reported that the group
managed to build up a solid structure of offshore companies to hide and
transfer money around the world. Their overseas companies were too ambiguous to
be away from the eyes of intelligence agencies and legal organizations, which
chace terrorism financiers all over the world.
The Brotherhood's economic strategy
was based on pillars of secrecy, deception, concealment, violence and
opportunism. The most prominent Brotherhood financiers were: Founder of Dar
al-Maal al-Islami Trust (DMI) Ibrahim Kamel, who owns an offshore company
Nassau of Bahamas; the founders of Al Nassau-based Taqwa bank Yousuf Nada,
Ghalib Himmat, Yusuf Al Qaradawi; Idris Nasreddin, the founder of Akida Bank
Private Ltd. in Nassau, the report added.
The banks of
the Taqwa and Akida are “shell companies” not financial institutions and come
under Taqwa Organization, which is associated to another entity owned by Nada
in Switzerland, the report continued.
According to
the report, Neda was a shareholder in Taqwa bank while Nasreddin assumed the
bank director post. Similarly, Akida bank owned and run by Nasreddin, while
Nada is a member in the Board of Directors. Other “real” banking activities are
being traded with European banks.