The Manila Times

Moroccans cry over $65-M scam

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RABAT: “Give us our money!” demands a group of home buyers, standing on land that should by now be finished condos — one of many fictitious projects that together comprise what is described as Morocco’s biggest-ever property scam.

Adverts on state television had promised dream homes at three for the price of two, while brochures boasted of ornately carved wood finishings and copious marble.

But it was all a fantasy — more than 600 million dirhams (about $65 million) allegedly disappeare­d, leaving more than 1,000 buyers out-of-pocket, according to one of the lawyers representi­ng them.

In a country where corruption is endemic, the unpreceden­ted scale of the alleged fraud has generated political waves.

Called upon by deputies to address the issue in parliament, Prime Minister Saad Eddine El Othmani said the government was absolved of any blame, provoking indignatio­n among defrauded investors who have appealed to King Mohammed 6th.

The man accused of being at the forefront of the scheme has been charged and is in detention awaiting trial. But the vast scam has prompted major questions about alleged negligence and complicity of some Moroccan institutio­ns.

Mohamed el Ouardi, as head of the Bab Darna group, allegedly received advances for apartments that never made it beyond the paper they were drawn on.

“The swimming pool would have been just over there,” scoffs would-be apartment owner Soufiane, aged in his 40s, as he points across a building site in the commercial capital Casablanca.

Bab Darna consists of a group of firms that cashed advances from “at least 1,000 victims,” who invested in around 15 fictitious real estate projects in and around Casablanca over a decade, Mourad el Ajouti, one of the lawyers for the investors, told Agence France-Presse.

The money was allegedly embezzled by cashing “advances ranging from 20 percent” to the full cost of the apartment, he added.

Houria, 49, who works in e-commerce, said “highly persuasive sales agents” proffered a golden opportunit­y and swayed her into advancing 400,000 dirhams, 20 percent of the cost of a villa.

But the vendor “had neither the title deed nor constructi­on permit,” el Ajouti said, basic requiremen­ts lacking in all contracts signed by the investors.

Such practices did not prevent Bab Darna from exhibiting with great fanfare at real- estate shows in Casablanca, Paris and Brussels.

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