8/3/12, "Paris villa of Equatorial Guinea leader's son Obiang seized," BBC
"French authorities have seized the Paris mansion of the son of Equatorial Guinea's leader as part of a money-laundering probe, officials confirm.
Teodorin Nguema Obiang Mangue is currently being sought on corruption charges.
His Paris villa is thought to be worth between 100m (£79m: $124m) and 150m euros, the AFP news agency reports.
Mr Obiang, the 43-year-old son of President Teodoro Nguema Obiang Mbasogo, denies any wrongdoing.
Authorities seized the six-storey property on July 19, a court official told the BBC.
The luxury mansion is located on Avenue Foch in one the most prestigious neighbourhoods of the French capital.
A week earlier, Judge Roger Le Loire had issued an international search warrant after Mr Obiang refused to be interviewed by magistrates on charges of corruption.
The allegations were brought forward by anti-corruption group Transparency International. The organisation suspects Mr Obiang, as well his father and several other African leaders, of using state assets to acquire property in France.
'Judicial Immunity'
Mr Obiang's lawyer, Emmanuel Marsigny, told the AFP news agency in mid-July that he had not been informed that any mandate for his client's arrest had been issued.
He added that any such warrant would be a "non-event" due to Mr Obiang's status.
"Mr Obiang has judicial immunity as he is the vice-president of Equatorial Guinea and therefore could not attend the summons," Mr Marsigny said.
Correspondents say Mr Obiang, who serves as agriculture minister, is known for his lavish lifestyle.
He recently hit the headlines when he honoured his promise to pay his national football team $1m (£641,000) for winning the opening game of the Africa Cup of Nations which Equatorial Guinea co-hosted earlier this year.
In October 2011, the US government said it would seek to recover assets worth more $70m from Mr Obiang. A month earlier, French police seized some fifteen luxury cars belonging to Mr Obiang, including a Maserati, Aston Martin and Rolls Royce.
Equatorial Guinea is one of Africa's largest oil exporters, but most of its 720,000-strong population lives in poverty.
President Obiang seized power from his uncle in 1979 and was re-elected last year with 95% of the vote."
"Teodorin Obiang is known for his lavish lifestyle."
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Ed. note: The US taxpayer is told he must transfer billions to African dictators so they can use the money to "help their poverty stricken people" recover from global warming. Right. Everyone is perfectly aware what African dictators would do with additional US taxpayer dollars but no one complains:
11/14/10, Edenhofer, UN IPCC official, "But one must say clearly that we distribute to the climate policy de facto, the world's wealth."...(parag. 5).
And if this happens,
- "Africa is the big winner, and it flows a lot of money there."...(parag. 3).
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7/13/11, "Shining a light on African leaders' 'ill-gotten gains'," France 24
11/24/11, "France: A vampire and a deposit box for Africa's looted funds?" ILoveAfricaBlog
3/7/11, "Canada Puts Corrupt African Leaders on Notice," NewsFromAfrica.org
12/3/11, "Protests at climate change summit in Durban," Richard Black, BBC (The BBC is owned by the UK government which is heavily invested in the 'climate' industry and is the home of ClimateGate).
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