Brazil seizes US$15 million in luxury wristwatches from Equatorial Guinea’s playboy Vice-President Obiang
Obiang’s group was also carrying about US$1.5 million in cash when they arrived in Sao Paulo last week
The vice-president of Equatorial Guinea has certainly earned his reputation for a love of all things luxe.
In 2014, Teodorin Nguema Obiang had to give up more than US$30 million worth of assets – including a mansion in Malibu, California, and expensive vehicles – to settle with the US Justice Department in a civil forfeiture case. Among his possessions was a collection of Michael Jackson paraphernalia, including one of the late singer’s gloves, studded with Swarovski crystals, that caught the attention of the Justice Department.
When that case closed, then-US Assistant Attorney General Leslie Caldwell said in a statement that Obiang – whose father is the country’s president – “shamelessly looted his government and shook down businesses in his country to support his lavish lifestyle, while many of his fellow citizens lived in extreme poverty.”
Brazilian laws prevent visitors from bringing more than US$2,400 in cash into the country, Agence France-Presse reported. Obiang’s group was found to be carrying about US $1.5 million in cash and watches estimated to be worth US$15 million.
Equatorial Guinea’s embassy in Washington did not respond to requests for comment. But its embassy in Brazil released a statement accusing Brazilian authorities of wrongly searching the Obiang delegation’s belongings.
“This approach of gross violation of international diplomatic practice had no other goal than to create a totally gratuitous embarrassment for the vice-president of Equatorial Guinea and the country he represents,” the statement said.
Obiang is used to raising eyebrows and suspicions over his belongings.
The French court ordered the seizure of about $115 million worth of his assets, and authorities sent in tow trucks to seize several of his luxury vehicles, including a Porsche Carrera. Other trucks were deployed to lug away some of his other expensive belongings.
At the time, the court handed Obiang a three-year suspended sentence and fined him about US$35 million, also suspended. Equatorial Guinea has since tried to fight the court’s decision.
Obiang’s father, Teodoro Obiang Nguema, has been in power since 1979, and under his rule, watchdog groups have ranked the small, central African nation one of the most corrupt in the world.
Equatorial Guinea is an oil-rich nation, but its population remains extremely poor. In Human Rights Watch’s 2018 world report, the group said, “Vast oil revenues fund lavish lifestyles for the small elite surrounding the president, while little progress has been made on improving access to key rights, including health care and primary education, for the vast majority of Equatorial Guineans.”
“Mismanagement of public funds, credible allegations of high-level corruption and repression of civil society groups and opposition politicians, and unfair trials, persist,” the report said.
As for what will happen to the many, many watches seized in Brazil from Obiang’s delegation? Agence France-Presse reported that the Brazilian Foreign Ministry said it is coordinating “with the federal police and the customs service over the case and to decide what measures should be taken.”
But the watches aren’t even worth that much compared with the other items Obiang has forfeited on various trips abroad. On top of the asset seizures in the United States and France, authorities in Switzerland have seized several of his luxury cars. And the Netherlands seized his US$120 million yacht in 2016. It was 75 metres long and named Ebony Shine.