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Greetings from Sarajevo,
Often our reporting focuses on countries where money is stolen by kleptocratic governments, corrupt politicians, and criminals. But in the countries that receive illicit money flows, the harm to everyday people can be more difficult to define.
In cities like Vancouver, where ultra wealthy foreigners have parked billions of dollars in the real estate market, an influx of foreign wealth has led to sky-high house prices that are out of reach for most Canadians.
Last week, OCCRP and the Toronto Star uncovered one source of shady foreign capital, a Chinese property developer who is accused of being part of a major military corruption scandal back in China.
Elsewhere, our member centers in South Asia and the Middle East have started exciting new projects to help investigative journalism thrive in those regions.
Here’s this week’s OCCRP newsletter:
** NEW INVESTIGATION
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🇨🇳 Identifying Dodgy Money in Vancouver Real Estate 🇨🇦 Chen Runkai is wanted in China for his alleged role in a major military corruption scandal. Yet he and his family were able to transfer at least CA$114 million into Canadian banks, some of which was poured into luxury real estate in Vancouver.
Read the full story ([link removed]) , which was a collaborative effort with the Toronto Star.
🌐 The Big Picture: The Chen family’s investments in Canada add to mounting concerns about illicit overseas money flowing into the country’s overheated real estate markets. The Criminal Intelligence Service of Canada estimates that CA$113 billion is laundered every year in the country.
😴 Banks “Asleep at the Switch”: Canada's biggest banks — including the Royal Bank of Canada, CIBC, TD and the Bank of Montreal — all accepted money from Runkai and his family without flagging it to the country’s financial regulator. Here’s what experts had to say. ([link removed])
📖 More Reading: OCCRP has found Canada to be an unusually difficult jurisdiction to obtain property records ([link removed]) . Read more about the country’s failures with transparency.
** HOW OCCRP INVESTIGATES
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🐴 Hunting Horses: For our #RussianAssetTracker project, we asked readers to send us tips about assets tied to Kremlin allies.
A category we didn't initially account for was "horses." But when a tip came in about $500,000 show-jumpers tied to Roman Abramovich, we began the hunt. Read more in our blog, “OCCRP: Unreported.” ([link removed])
Join the fight against corruption.
SUPPORT OCCRP ([link removed])
** THE OCCRP NETWORK
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🇸🇮 Oštro: Our Slovenian member center’s fact-checking platform, Razkrinkavanje.si, is now part of Meta’s “third-party fact-checking program ([link removed]) ,” which deputizes independent journalists and researchers to flag misinformation on Facebook and Instagram.
🌍 ARIJ: Our regional partner has released the first whistleblower platform in Arabic, iARIJ ([link removed]) . People can remain anonymous and all data is kept confidential.
🇱🇰 Watchdog: As Sri Lanka’s economy spirals, our partner’s fact-checking platform is in overdrive to verify as many viral claims as possible. One check debunked claims ([link removed]) made by other media outlets that the World Bank had promised Sri Lanka $700 million.
🇳🇱 Follow The Money: An investigation by our Dutch partner found research carried out by Dutc ([link removed]) h scientists who partnered with Chinese universities ([link removed]) may have fallen into the hands of the Chinese military.
🇺🇦 Slidstvo.Info: Our Ukrainian member center obtained a list of Russian phone numbers and the addresses of Russian bases in the Kyiv region. By combining these two data sets ([link removed]) , reporters identified where and when soldiers were deployed — information that could be relevant in future war crimes cases.
🇰🇬 Kloop: Bektour Iskender, a journalist at our Kyrgyz member center, spoke about his outlet’s corruption reporting with TRACE International ([link removed]) , a non-profit business association focused on anti-bribery and compliance measures.
➕ 🇰🇬 More from Kyrgyzstan: Earlier this year, authorities raided the office of Temirov LIVE, our other Kyrgyz partner, arresting its founder on drug charges.
In response, Temirov journalists published an investigation with footage of the night of the raid, ([link removed]) raising serious questions about the legitimacy of law enforcement’s actions, the integrity of the charges against Temirov, and who was pulling the strings.
** OCCRP IN NEWS
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🇬🇲 The Gambia: In 2019, OCCRP exposed how former Gambian president Yahya Jammeh ([link removed]) and his associates plundered roughly $1 billion in timber resources and public funds, much of which was spent on luxuries abroad.
Last week, the U.S. Department of Justice announced ([link removed]) that it has seized a Maryland property that was purchased with $3.5 million in alleged corruption proceeds linked to the former president.
🇭🇳 Honduras: In 2020, OCCRP detailed the key role of one man, Axel G. López, in a $47-million coronavirus procurement scandal involving mobile hospitals.
Now, the former head of the government body that bought them has beenconvicted of breaking Honduran public procurement law. ([link removed])
🇱🇧 Lebanon: Firas Hamdan unexpectedly won a seat in parliament on May 15 in southern Lebanon’s 111th district.
He and his colleagues with the "Together Towards Change" party have credited OCCRP and our local partner Daraj ([link removed]) for bringing corruption to the forefront.
** BIG EVENTS
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Karlovy Vary International Film Festival: Our documentary The Killing of a Journalist will premiere in Europe at one of Central Europe’s most prestigious film festivals. July 1 to 9. Get tickets here ([link removed]) .
DFRLab: OCCRP Deputy Editor in Chief Miranda Patrucic will moderate a panel on digital authoritarianism and the Pegasus Project. June 6. You can join in Brussels or virtually. ([link removed])
P.S. Thank you for reading the OCCRP newsletter. Feel free to reply with any feedback.
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