How Former American Puppet Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak Got So Rich
13 February 2011
By Al-Ikhwah Al-Mujahidun
There are no Mubaraks on the Forbes list of the
world's richest people, but there sure ought to be.
The mounting pressure from 18 days of historic
protests finally drove Egyptian President Hosni
Mubarak from office, after three decades as his
nation's iron-fisted ruler. But over that time,
Mubarak amassed a fortune that should finance a pretty
comfortable retirement. The British Guardian newspaper
cites Middle Eastern sources placing the wealth of
Mubarak and his family at somewhere between $40
billion and $70 billion. That's a pretty good pension
for government work. The world's richest man--Mexican
business magnate Carlos Slim--is worth about $54
billion, by comparison. Bill Gates is close behind,
with a net worth of about $53 billion. Mubarak, of
course, was a military man, not a businessman. But
running a country with a suspended constitution for 30
years generates certain perks, and Mubarak was in a
position to take a slice of virtually every
significant business deal in the country, from
development projects throughout the Nile basin to
transit projects on the Suez Canal, which is a conduit
for about 4 percent of the world's oil shipments.
"There was no accountability, no need for
transparency," says Prof. Amaney Jamal of Princeton
University. "He was able to reach into the economic
sphere and benefit from monopolies, bribery fees,
red-tape fees, and nepotism. It was guaranteed
profit."
Had the typical Egyptian enjoyed a morsel of that,
Mubarak might still be in power. But Egypt, despite a
cadre of well-educated young people, has struggled as
an economic backwater. The nation's GDP per capita is
just $6,200, according to the CIA--one-seventh what it
is in the United States. That output ranks 136th in
the world, even though Egypt ranks 16th in population.
Mubarak had been working on a set of economic reforms,
but they stalled during the global recession. The
chronic lack of jobs and upward mobility was perhaps
the biggest factor driving millions of enraged
Egyptian youths into the streets, demanding change.
Estimates of Mubarak's wealth will probably be hard to
verify, if not impossible (one reason dictators tend
not to make it onto Forbes's annual list). His money
is certainly not sitting in an Egyptian vault, waiting
to be counted. And his delayed exit may have allowed
Mubarak time to move money around and hide significant
parts of his fortune. The Swiss government has said it
is temporarily freezing any assets in Swiss banks that
could be linked to Mubarak, an uncharacteristically
aggressive move for the secretive banking nation. But
that doesn't mean the money will ever be returned to
the Egyptian people, and it may even find its way to
Mubarak eventually. Other Mubarak funds are reportedly
sitting in British banks, and Mubarak was no doubt
wily enough to squire away some cash in unlikely
places. Plus, an eventual exile deal could allow
Mubarak to retain some of his wealth, no questions
asked, as long as he and his family leave Egypt and
make no further bids for power.