NEW YORK (AP) — Mozambique’s former finance minister has been sentenced to serve another two-and-a-half years in prison by a U.S. court for his role in the “ tuna bond ” scandal that triggered a financial crisis in the African nation.
Manuel Chang, 69, was convicted last year of accepting payoffs to put his homeland secretly on the hook for about $2 billion in loans from major overseas banks.
A federal judge in New York on Friday sentenced Chang to eight-and-a-half years in prison, including nearly six years he has already served behind bars in the U.S. and South Africa, where he was arrested.
Speaking through an interpreter, Chang told the court Friday that he has learned from his mistakes and is “very disgusted” with his conduct.
“I deeply regret the damage I have caused,“ he said. “I am sorry.“
But Chang also implored the judge to have “compassion” and to factor into his sentence the nearly six years he had already served in prison, including about four-and-a-half years he spent incarcerated in deplorable conditions in South Africa.
“I would not like to die here in a prison in a foreign country, far away from my family,” Chang said.
Chang, who was Mozambique’s top finance official from 2005 to 2015, could have been sentenced to up to 20 years in prison. In filings ahead of Friday’s sentencing, prosecutors argued for a prison sentence of 11 to 14 years. Chang’s lawyers argued for him to be sentenced to the time he’s already served behind bars.
The loans were supposed to finance a tuna fishing fleet, a shipyard, Coast Guard vessels and other maritime projects. Instead, prosecutors say, bankers and government officials plundered the funds through bribes and kickbacks.
During the trial, prosecutors said Chang pocketed $7 million in bribes, which they said was wired through U.S. banks to European accounts. In total, Chang and other participants diverted more than $200 million, defrauding investors in the U.S. and elsewhere by misrepresenting how the loan proceeds would be used and causing them to suffer substantial losses, prosecutors said.
Chang’s lawyers argued that there was no evidence of a financial quid-pro-quo.
They maintained he was simply doing as his government wished when he signed off on pledges that Mozambique would repay the loans, which were borrowed by three government-controlled companies between 2013 and 2016.
When the companies defaulted, Mozambique was stuck with a $2 billion debt, or roughly 12% of the nation’s gross domestic product at the time.
The “hidden debt” came to light in 2016, plunging the country into financial upheaval.