Latest News

Attorney General says that Guyanese mining entrepreneurs could be extradited.

Guyana's Attorney-General said that Azruddin Mohammed and Nazar Ahmed, two Guyanese entrepreneurs, would be extradited back to the United States, to face charges for fraud and money laundering in relation to gold exports.

Last week, the businessmen who own the gold exporting firm Mohamed's Enterprise were indicted by a Florida court on charges of conspiracy and money laundering in order to enrich themselves as well as defrauding the government of Guyana.

Azruddin Mohammed, a politician who founded his party three months before Guyana’s general elections in September, said to local media that he is assembling a team of lawyers to fight the U.S. accusations.

The court for the Southern District of Florida stated that he and his father were accused of entering agreements on behalf of Mohamed’s Enterprise in order to sell and ship thousands of kilograms of Guyanese Gold to buyers in Miami or Dubai, by using fraudulently Guyana customs seals and declarations.

In one of the 11 charges, they are also accused of paying bribes in order to get Guyanese officials to accept gold shipments that had duplicate paperwork.

Azruddin Mohammed accused Guyana's People's Progressive Party, which is in power, of persecuting his political career. Azruddin Mohamed said that the ruling People's Progressive Party was doing all they could to stop him. They were afraid of the momentum from the last election, and the call for change by the Guyanese.

Last year, the U.S. Treasury imposed sanctions on the businessmen based on the same fraud accusations.

Anil Nandlall, Attorney General of Guyana, said in an evening show that he broadcasts regularly on social media late Tuesday night: "The next steps are for the United States of America government to request the Government of Guyana extradite the two individuals."

He said: "This legal process will be undertaken and it is part of an extradition agreement between the governments of the U.S.A. and Guyana."

Azruddin Mohammed's party won 16 seats in the Guyana general elections last month. This puts him in a position to be sworn-in as the opposition leader in November.

(source: Reuters)