Two sons of former Yemeni president Ali Abdullah Saleh face trial in September 2026 in Paris for allegedly buying luxury property in the French capital with money plundered from the Yemeni state.
Ahmed Ali Saleh, the 53-year old eldest son of the ex-president assassinated in 2017, is described by the National Financial Prosecutor's Office (PNF) as βthe heart of this oligarchy operating as a financial business,β French prosecutors confirmed to The National.
With his brother Khaled, 38, Ahmed Ali Saleh is accused by the PNF of βmoney laundering of embezzled public funds and organised corruption.β The two men deny the charges.
The charges related to more than $30 million of money transfers between 2009 and 2011 that moved through their bank accounts in Paris.
The allegations highlight corruption in one of the poorest countries in the world under the 1990-2012 presidential mandate of Ali Abdullah Saleh, who was toppled after the Arab uprisings.
Ali Abdullah Saleh, centre, pictured in 2006, was president of Yemen from 1990 to 2012. Getty Images
Yemen has for more than a decade been mired in a civil war where the Iran-backed Houthi movement took over the capital, Sanaa. The fighting has hardened sectarian divisions and hardship has increased as foreign aid efforts struggle to meet the population's basic needs.
While he was in power, Ali Abdullah Saleh is believed to have amassed a fortune estimated between $32 billion and $60 billion with a system of bribes on gas, oil and arms deals. He allegedly also siphoned public money, according to figures collected by a UN group of experts on Yemen.
After he stepped down, Ali Abdullah Saleh then allied himself with the Houthi militias he had once fought in the north of the country. But they killed him three years when Sanaa was overrun in 2014.
Luxury real estate
At the heart of the forthcoming proceedings are funds that were allegedly used to buy three properties near the Arc de Triomphe, one of the most upmarket neighbourhoods in Paris,
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