Thank you very much.
I appreciate the opportunity to tell you a little bit about my knowledge on the subject of corruption, and specifically what your committee is doing.
I would like to underline something about the modern authoritarian state. Whether we speak of elected autocrats, like Nicolás Maduro in Venezuela, Vladimir Putin in Russia, or of dictators like Teodoro Obiang in Equatorial Guinea or Nursultan Nazarbayev in Kazakhstan, all of these are almost pathological kleptocrats. To achieve their aims of accumulation of illegally gotten wealth, they typically rely on significant natural resources that range from gold and diamond mines, oil and gas exploitation, vast forests, or even water to secure the funds that they want to hide in distant jurisdictions. Just as important, kleptocrats in power rely on domestic or foreign henchmen who operate in excellent terms domestically and through unhinged joint ventures with western companies and are ready to take a significant share of the spoils in return for silent complicity and for acting as fixers. The proxies and cronies of corrupt rulers are usually free to travel to the west, to own luxury mansions and apartments, to open bank accounts and invest in the stock market, and to make significant investments elsewhere.
I'm here to make two general points, and then to provide an important, current, and developing example. First, as currently constituted, your sanctions system lacks any teeth to punish corrupt officials, who are also gross human rights violators, or their cronies, who are also key enablers in dictatorships. My second general point is that passing a Canadian version of the U.S. Magnitsky Act would be a step in the right direction.
On the first point, if we consider the way the modern dictator operates, the Freezing Assets of Corrupt Foreign Officials Act, or FACFOA, sanctions come into place too late: when the corrupt dictatorship has already been removed from power and the new democratic or authoritarian government requests Canada to go after the assets of the most recent set of thieves, such as in the cases of Tunisia or Ukraine. Because of the way your law is written, FACFOA may even serve as a political tool for one set of corrupt officials to settle problems with another set of the same type of official that preceded them. Furthermore, FACFOA requires a foreign state actor to initiate a process.
Unless there are exceptional situations where the UN urges, through the UN Act, or the Canadian government determines that a serious threat to international peace and security exists, the Canadian sanctions system does nothing to deal with corrupt cronies and individuals who act as enablers of corrupt government officials who are also dictators. Both may be laundering their money in Canada. Essentially, a discussion of a Canadian Magnitsky Act has stalled after it was first introduced in 2015. To the extent that it targets specific government officials and cronies closely connected to gross human rights violations by the regime in question, I believe this act would be an excellent first step in the right direction. In this case, Canada should heed the advice of former member of Parliament and human rights champion Irwin Cotler.
With regard to FACFOA's and SEMA's deficiencies, let me provide one example. A group of Venezuelan businessmen formed a criminal association that operates under the name Derwick Associates. The principals of this company are in their twenties and thirties, and they had no prior experience whatsoever in government contracting, yet, in the space of one year, the Government of Venezuela provided them with 12 construction and procurement contracts for power plants. The businessmen, Venezuelans who also hold foreign citizenships for countries like Spain, Italy, and Germany, subcontracted all of the work to a second-rate company inside the United States. Derwick Associates then overbilled the Venezuelan government by almost $2 billion, and carried out an exchange rate fraud. The total amount stolen by these men exceeds $4 billion Canadian. If you consider the size of other well-publicized scandals around the world, if you consider the FIFA scandal, this scandal is multiples of that.
They paid kickbacks to Venezuelan government officials at the highest level, and then they set about laundering their money. They laundered part of this money by using U.S. banks, and they also laundered it by using the Royal Bank of Canada. They then invested hundreds of millions of their ill-gotten gains into numerous ventures, including two oil companies. One is a Texas company called Harvest Natural Resources. They also bought 20% of a publicly traded Canadian company by the name of Pacific Rubiales Energy. Incidentally, thanks to their ownership of this Toronto-based company, they blocked the acquisition of that company by a Mexican business group. Having stopped that merger, the shares of Pacific Rubiales tumbled to historic lows, causing losses in the hundreds of millions of dollars in value for shareholders.
In Canada, these men don't operate under the name Derwick Associates. They operate under the name O'Hara Group. The names of these men are Leopoldo Alejandro Betancourt, Pédro José Trébbau, Francisco Convit, Orlando Alvarado, and Francisco D'Agostino Casado. This last individual is the brother-in-law of the president of the Venezuelan legislature. I'm familiar with the actions of these individuals, because I am one of the two plaintiffs in a lawsuit against them, where we include in our verified complaint detailed allegations of bribery, kickbacks, money laundering, and predicate acts that reveal them to be engaging in racketeering.
Distinguished members, any act of corruption in conjunction with an authoritarian government is by necessity an action that empowers the government and enables it to continue to violate human rights with impunity. It is an action that entrenches these authoritarians. In the case of Derwick Associates, to give one very clear example that involves Canada, they've carried out smear campaigns against whistle-blowers in four different countries, and they have corrupted the financial systems of Spain, Andorra, the United States, and Canada.
Authoritarian governments would be powerless if they didn't have enforcers willing to arbitrarily arrest, torture, and execute innocent people, but just as importantly, they need individuals willing to whitewash and launder dirty money and pay them kickbacks. Governments often target individuals who choose to become enforcers of brutality, injustice, and oppression; however, enablers of corruption, the clearly corrupt cronies like these men have remained largely spared from any sanctions.
The Canadian sanctions under the Special Economic Measures Act jointly with FACFOA is a program that should be strengthened to cover not only corrupt cronies in Tunisia, Ukraine, Russia, Burma, North Korea, Iran, Libya, South Sudan, Syria, and Zimbabwe, but also the corrupt cronies of Nicolás Maduro's government and many other governments around the world. Simple, targeted sanctions like visa denials and asset freezes, such as the one being discussed here today, have the potential to change the mindset of the financial enablers of the authoritarians and motivate them to abandon the oppressive political structures that they currently prop up.
Thank you.