Then-President Hilda Heine, right, with daughter Kathy Jetnil-Kijiner, minutes after being elected the first female president of the Marshall Islands in January 2016, was targeted for "revenge" by proponents of a controversial foreign investment scheme, said criminal charges filed by the U.S. Justice Department in New York. Marshall Islands Journal photo

MAJURO, 05 SEPTEMBER 2022 (MARIANAS VARIETY) — The United States Justice Department unsealed an indictment Saturday against two naturalised Marshall Islands citizens accused of bribing numerous high-level elected and other officials in the Marshall Islands to gain government support for establishing a controversial semi-autonomous zone for foreign investment activities in this western Pacific nation.

Cary Yan and Gina Zhou were extradited from Thailand and arrived in New York City Saturday, U.S. Justice Department officials announced. Yan and Zhou, both naturalised Marshallese citizens who are also known as Hong Hui Yan or Chen Hong and Chaoting Zhou or Angel Zhou, respectively, had been in jail in Thailand since November 2020.

Yan and Zhou are charged with three counts of violating the U.S Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and two counts related to money laundering. “The U.S Attorney announces extradition of two defendants charged with bribing high-level officials of the Republic of the Marshall Islands,” said an announcement Saturday of the unsealing of the indictment against Yan and Zhou issued the U.S Attorney’s Office of the Southern District of New York.

The charges are the result of a multi-year investigation by the U.S Federal Bureau of Investigation and the U.S Justice Department.

The charges refer to six Marshall Islands officials by number designation, not by name. Five of the six, who are described as “Official-1,” “Official-2” and so forth in the indictment, are alleged to have accepted bribes, while one is said to have refused to accept a bribe to support legislation to create the special investment zone for Rongelap Atoll. The charges state that Yan and Zhou paid bribes and also paid for travel and entertainment of high-level Marshall Islands officials for events related to supporting a foreign investment initiative in the Marshall Islands, including a public launch of the plan in Hong Kong in April 2018.

“As alleged, Cary Yan and Gina Zhou’s bribery scheme was designed to influence and manipulate the legislative process of the Republic of the Marshall Islands in order to benefit themselves and their associates financially,” said U.S Attorney Damian Williams in a statement. “Yan and Zhou’s bribes blatantly flouted the sovereignty of the Republic of the Marshall Islands and its legislature, and the dedicated investigative work carried out by this Office and our partners signals that the Southern District of New York will not tolerate those who violate the integrity of democratic processes.”

U.S law enforcement said Yan and Zhou engaged in numerous corrupt practices that aimed at subverting the legislation process in the Marshall Islands for their personal interests. Yan was the proponent in 2018 of the “Rongelap Atoll Special Administrative Region” or RASAR — a bid to set up a special foreign investment zone that would have been exempt from many of the country’s laws — that then-President Hilda Heine’s government refused to endorse.

In 2021 it was repackaged by Yan and proponents as the “Digital Economic Zone of Rongelap Atoll” or DEZRA and promoted as way to address economic development needs of this U.S nuclear weapons test-affected island group that left most of Rongelap Atoll off-limits due to high radiation levels. DEZRA “is such an invitation to unscrupulous activities that I would be surprised if any reputable financial institution would want to deal with the government that condones this,” John Douglas, the chairman of the Financial Services Volunteer Corps, a group closely connected to the U.S Treasury Department that has advised the Marshall Islands for many years, said in May 2021 as the DEZRA legislation was pending in the Marshall Islands parliament. Ultimately, the legislation was not passed.

“Yan and Zhou allegedly engaged in a multi-year scheme to bribe elected officials in the Marshall Islands and to corrupt the legislative process,” said Assistant Attorney General Kenneth A. Polite, Jr. “The department is committed to prosecuting individuals who participate in international corruption and undermine the integrity of democratic institutions and the free marketplace.”

FBI Assistant Director Michael J. Driscoll said in a statement, “As alleged, the defendants conducted multiple illegal activities to benefit their personal interests at the expense of the people of the Marshall Islands.”

The charges are filed in New York because Yan ran a non-governmental organisation, the World Organisation for Governance and Competitiveness, that was registered in New York in the 2016-2018 period that “held itself out as maintaining ‘special consultative status’ with the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs from at least in or about 2016 to at least in or about 2018,” said the court charges…. PACNEWS

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