Azerbaijan ties add to Prince Andrew’s woes
June 2,
20214 Min ReadJo Harper
https://emerging-europe.com/news/azerbaijan-ties-add-to-prince-andrews-woes/
Jo Harper
Wanted for questioning by the FBI over his links to
the disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein, dealings with Azerbaijan may in fact
be the Achilles heel of the UK’s Prince Andrew.
British
businessman David ‘Spotty’ Rowland is not Jeffrey Epstein. But he did share
with the deceased and disgraced financier and convicted sex offender a
friendship with Prince Andrew, the hapless second son of the Queen of England,
currently wanted by the FBI for questioning into Epstein’s alleged paedophile
activities.
When Andrew
was facing the sack from his role as the UK’s special representative for international
trade and investment because of the Epstein scandal, Rowland’s son, Jonathan,
suggested their commercial activities continue “under the radar”. Andrew
reportedly responded in an email: ‘I like your thinking,’ Bloomberg
Businessweek reported.
Like
Epstein, Rowland also came to the rescue of Andrew’s ex-wife, the Duchess of
York, paying 40,000 UK pounds to help clear her debts.
Rowland and
ex-Banque Havilland Chairman Graham Robeson also have ties to the UK
Conservative party. Rowland was one of David Cameron’s main backers in the 2010
general election, giving over six million UK pounds. Robeson was honoured for
his political work with a 2015 Order of the British Empire (OBE).
Rowland
paid 40 million UK pounds a small private bank in Luxembourg, which he renamed
Banque Havilland, in 2009 from the ruins of Iceland’s Kaupthing Bank. His plan
seems to have been to use Andrew’s network of contacts to tap into emerging
markets in Eastern Europe, the Middle East, and Asia.
“Andrew
acted as an unofficial door opener for Rowland and his private bank in
Luxembourg,” Bloomberg Businessweek reported, based on emails, internal
documents, and previously unreported regulatory filings.
Andrew was
able to live a lifestyle beyond the reach of his 280,000 UK pounds annual
salary from the British taxpayer, while Rowland was able to squeeze through
more doors.
Rowland
then set up a venture called Inverness Asset Management domiciled in the
British Virgin Islands, an offshore tax haven. Blackfish marketing documents
from 2007 indicate Andrew owned 40% of Inverness, Bloomberg Businessweek
reported. Inverness was wound down in January 2019.
Dodgy customers
Some of
Banque Havilland’s clients were so toxic that in 2018 even Luxembourg’s
regulator was alarmed and a criminal investigation was launched. It is still
ongoing. The probe is looking at the bank’s relationship with the political
elite of Azerbaijan, among other things.
Andrew was
a frequent visitor to the oil-rich country, while he was the UK’s trade envoy
and after, and met President Ilham Aliyev over a dozen times.
According
to Bloomberg Businessweek, Rowland accompanied Andrew on a trip to Azerbaijan
in 2008 and afterwards emailed a relative of Aliyev’s wife who ran the
country’s largest company, Pasha Holding. In 2009, Pasha reportedly routed five
million US dollars to an investment fund controlled by the Rowlands that had an
account at Banque Havilland.
In 2014,
Banque Havilland bought a Bahamas-based bank where Aliyev’s daughters had
accounts. They subsequently used one of the accounts to lend money to two
companies whose main role seemed to be making loans to the family of Mikhail
Gutseriev, the largest shareholder of RussNeft, a Russian oil company, also
with interests in Azerbaijan.
Andrew is
currently facing potential new revelations stemming from the trial of Ghislaine
Maxwell, Epstein’s erstwhile alleged accomplice, but it may be Azerbaijan that
proves his Achilles heel.
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