(WMR) -- The
Saudi newspaper, Asharq Alawsat,
is reporting from Jeddah that Saudi billionaire banker Khalid Bin Mahfouz, the
controversial former director of the National Commercial Bank of Saudi Arabia
and someone who was often accused of being linked to financial support to
groups associated with �Al Qaeda� -- with Mahfouz�s legal team carrying
out rapid lawsuit action mainly in London against transgressing journalists
-- died this past Saturday from a sudden heart attack at his home in
Jeddah.
Arab Newson, August 18, reported: �Recently Bin
Mahfouz cleared his name from accusations he was funding terrorism through the
Blessed Relief charity of the Muwafaq Foundation, an organization devoted to
famine relief.�
On September 21, 2005, WMR reported, �In 1992, according to The
Houston Chronicle, George W. Bush�s
friend James Bath was investigated by the Treasury Department�s Financial
Crimes Enforcement Network (FINCEN) and the FBI. Investigators suspected Saudi
investors who worked with Bath of illegally trying to influence U.S. policy
during the Reagan and Bush I administrations. Bath invested Saudi money in
Arbusto �70 Ltd., Arbusto �80 Ltd., and Bush Exploration Co. (which later
morphed into Harken Energy Corp., which included George W. Bush as its
director). After Desert Storm, Harken was granted lucrative off-shore drilling
rights by Bahrain, a Desert Storm coalition partner. One of the other
shareholders of Harken, along with Bush, was Saudi businessman Abdullah Taha
Bakhsh. According to the Chronicle,
Bath, who was a sole agent of Salem Bin Laden [older brother of Osama Bin
Laden], was also the sole director of Skyway Aircraft Leasing Corp., one of the
affiliates of Skyways International. Bath established four corporate entities
with the name �Skyway� and the firm that incorporated the corporate contrivances
in the Cayman Islands for Bath was the same one that established a Cayman-based
money laundering front company for Oliver North in the Iran-contra scandal. In
1977, Bath bought Houston Gulf Airport on behalf of Salem Bin Laden. Skyway
Aircraft Leasing Corporation was, according to the Chronicle, owned by Khalid Bin Mahfouz, a
major shareholder in the defunct Bank of Credit and Commerce International
(BCCI), a major money laundering activity for George H. W. Bush�s Iran-contra
caper. Bin Mahfouz was also the owner of the National Commercial Bank of Saudi
Arabia.�
On June 19, 2009, WMR reported: �In order to suppress press
freedom in the United States, individuals have threatened to sue U.S.
journalists for libel in foreign jurisdictions like England where the
burden of proof is on the journalist to prove the facts of his or her story.
Libel plaintiffs often seek outrageous judgments and legal fees in courts
in London from American journalists to shut down their investigations . .
. The �big daddy� of such lawsuits is Khalid Bin Mahfouz, a Bush family
crony and Saudi billionaire who has threatened some 30 lawsuits against
American authors in England. In fact, influential Saudis are the chief
instigators or lawsuits against U.S. journalists in London courts.�
In October 2006, French authors Guillaume Dasquie and
Charles Brisard were forced to publicly apologize to Khalid Bin Mahfouz and his
son Sheikh Abdulrahman Bin Mahfouz for allegations in their book �Forbidden
Truth� that linked Khalid Bin Mahfouz�s business enterprises to support for
terrorist groups. This editor wrote one of the introductions for �Forbidden
Truth.� The Bin Mahfouzes took legal actions against the two authors in courts
in the UK and Switzerland.
The sudden death of Bin Mahfouz comes after reports that
Prince Bandar bin Sultan, the former Saudi ambassador to the United States and
someone so close to the Bush family he has been called �Bandar Bush,�
was placed under house arrest after a failed coup against Saudi King
Abdullah. The report on Bandar�s arrest came from a Saudi opposition movement,
the Islamic Reform Movement.
The reported arrest of Bandar and the sudden death of
Mahfouz not only marks the loss of Bush family influence in Saudi Arabia, but
removes from the scene two individuals who constantly threatened lawsuits
against journalists who attempted to delve into the murky business dealings
between two influential Saudis and America�s most influential political
dynasty.
Previously
published in the Wayne
Madsen Report.
Copyright � 2009 WayneMadenReport.com
Wayne
Madsen is a Washington, DC-based investigative journalist and
nationally-distributed columnist. He is the editor and publisher of the Wayne Madsen Report
(subscription required).