NEW: Izzat Khanim Javadova — the cousin of Azerbaijan’s longtime authoritarian president Ilham Aliyev — owns millions of dollars in luxurious properties in London and Ibiza along with her husband. 1/ occrp.org/en/azerbaijani…
This festive photo, which Javadova posted on her Facebook page, was taken from an apartment in Whitehall Court, one of London’s most exclusive residences. 2/
Last week, OCCRP revealed in a joint investigation with @anticorruption that Javadova and her husband are being investigated in the U.K. for receiving millions of dollars from the #AzerbaijaniLaundromat, a massive money movement scheme. 3/ occrp.org/en/azerbaijani…
This is the first time a member of Azerbaijan's “first family” — the relatives of President Aliyev — has been found to use the Azerbaijani Laundromat. Here’s our earlier reporting on the $2.9 billion money laundering system. 4/ occrp.org/en/azerbaijani…
Here are two more properties, both on Ibiza, that Javadova and her husband acquired even as the money rolled into their accounts from offshore. 5/
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Authorities assert that at the center of the ‘Ndrangheta’s European cocaine empire were Sebastiano Giorgi, a restauranteur based in Germany, and a number of his relatives.
Together, the Giorgis played a key role in connecting drug cartels in Latin America w/ European buyers. 2/
Most of the Giorgis' cocaine arrived via European cities like Antwerp, the largest fruit-handling port on the continent.
Fresh produce needs to be processed quickly due to its short shelf-life, making food hauls and similar shipments the ideal vessels for concealing drugs. 3/
NEW: A popular London-based DJ turns out to be the cousin of Azerbaijan’s president.
She and her husband received millions from 20 offshore firms — at least 6 of which are part of a $2.9b money laundering scheme known as the #AzerbaijaniLaundromat 1/ occrp.org/en/azerbaijani…
The Azeri couple is currently under investigation in the UK, but a court order blocked the release of their names.
In May, the @EveningStandard won a legal appeal to reverse this decision, which came into force today. Here’s what we found 👇 2/
Izzat Khanim Javadova, aka "Mikaela Jav," and her husband, whose father is an ex-deputy energy minister, received $19m from the opaque network of offshore firms. This shows, for the first time, that a member of Azerbaijan’s ruling family used the #AzerbaijaniLaundromat. 3/
Imon International is a widely celebrated Tajik microlender that was founded 20 years ago to help women entrepreneurs. Its clients can also open bank accounts. And in 2017, one suspicious client sent $48 million abroad through Imon. 1/ occrp.org/en/investigati…
The client was supposedly an importer of construction materials. But it owned no warehouse and was registered — just days before opening its accounts — in this residential building in Dushanbe. 2/
In less than half a year, its transfers represented nearly 20 percent of all of the money Imon’s clients sent abroad over five years. Imon even had to hire additional staff to keep up with the deposits. But nobody seemed to ask very many questions. 3/
NEW: OCCRP and @riseprojectro🇷🇴 reveal the first public evidence tying an official at the world’s largest tobacco company to organized crime in Europe.
➡️ On paper: 17 tons of Chinese cigarettes made in the EU were sent to Libya, thus avoiding excise taxes.
➡️ In reality: They were offloaded to be sold in Europe. 17 tons of junk were sent to Libya in an identical container. 2/ cdn.occrp.org/projects/great…
The people behind this scheme included:
➡️ Three smugglers with links to an Italian organized crime group.
➡️ An executive at China Tobacco’s European branch: China Tobacco International Europe Company (CTIEC).
CTIEC makes some of Europe’s most smuggled brands. 3/
China Brasil Tobacos Exportadora (CBT) is a joint venture between the Brazilian subsidiaries of a US firm and China Tobacco.
Though China Tobacco has evaded the scrutiny faced by its US-owned partner, including lawsuits from labor rights defenders. 2/ occrp.org/en/loosetobacc…
A farm contracted by one of the firms that owns CBT was found using "slave labor." The firm was held partly responsible, but the penalties were later removed under new legislation.
In another case, workers were forced to resign after revealing their pregnancies to bosses. 3/