Timeline of French graft probes into African elites

A Paris court handed down a suspended jail term and fine to Equatorial Guinea Vice President Teodorin Obiang on Friday after the first trial stemming from multiple investigations into assets linked to the leaders of three oil-rich African countries.


The ruling families of Equatorial Guinea, Congo-Brazzaville and Gabon all face investigations looking into claims of embezzlement and money-laundering.

– Elites accused –

– December 2008: The French chapter of Transparency International (TI) and non-governmental group Sherpa file a suit against the three countries’ presidents accusing them of acquiring luxury homes in France with embezzled public money.

– November 2010: A French court authorises judges to start investigating the allegations.

– September 2011: French judicial officials raid Paris property belonging to the family of Equatorial Guinea President Teodoro Obiang Nguema, hauling away Bugattis, Ferraris, Rolls-Royce Phantoms and other cars.

Nine seized cars are auctioned in July 2013 for 3.21 million euros.

– First warrant, charges –

– July 2012: A court issues an international arrest warrant for Obiang’s son Teodorin after he refuses to heed a summons. He is agriculture minister and deputy head of mission to UN cultural agency UNESCO, and tries to claim diplomatic immunity.

– July 2012: The Paris mansion of Teodorin Obiang is seized. The six-storey apartment is reportedly worth more than 100 million euros ($130 million dollars).

– March 2014: Teodorin Obiang is charged with corruption and embezzlement. He denies the charges.

– Investigation widens –

– August-September 2015: Judges seize several properties suspected of belonging to a nephew of Congo-Brazzaville President Denis Sassou Nguesso.

– December 2015: A French appeals court rules that Teodorin Obiang does not have immunity against prosecution.

– April 2016: French judges seize properties belonging to the family of Gabon’s president Omar Bongo, who died in 2009, including a villa in Nice and a Paris mansion.

Two Paris apartments in the name of Sassou Nguesso’s wife Antoinette are also confiscated.

– September 2016: French authorities announce that Teodorin Obiang, promoted to first vice president in June, will stand trial.

– January 2017: Teodorin Obiang’s trial begins in his absence and is postponed immediately. It resumes in June and ends in July with prosecutors demanding a three-year jail term and a 30-million-euro fine.

– March 2017: Sassou Nguesso’s nephew, Wilfrid, is placed under investigation for money laundering and misuse of public funds in France.

– June 2017: Investigators charge a daughter and son-in-law of Congo’s president with money laundering and misuse of public funds.

– July 2017: Another nephew of Sassou Nguesso and a former sister-in-law are charged. Five members of Sassou Nguesso’s entourage have now been charged.

– August 2017: French judges wrap up their investigation into the Bongo family and no charges were announced.

– The first verdict –

– October 2017: Paris court hands Obiang a three-year suspended jail term and a suspended fine of 30 million euros for embezzlement, money laundering, corruption and abuse of trust. The court also orders that his plush residence near the Champs-Elysees avenue to be confiscated permanently.

Access premium news and stories

Access to the top content, vouchers and other member only benefits