- OpenAI unveils 'Operator' agent that handles web tasks
- Bamboo farm gets chopping for US zoo's hungry new pandas
- Fear in US border city as Trump launches immigration overhaul
- 242 mn children's schooling disrupted by climate shocks in 2024: UNICEF
- US Republicans pressure Democrats with 'born-alive' abortion bill
- Trump Davos address lifts S&P 500 to record, dents oil prices
- Between laughs and 'disaster', Trump divides Davos
- Hundreds of people protest ahead of Swiss Davos meeting
- US falling behind on wind power, think tank warns
- US news giant CNN eyes 200 job cuts, streaming overhaul
- Rubio chooses Central America for first trip amid Panama Canal pressure
- Wall Street's AI-fuelled rally falters, oil slumps
- Trump tells Davos elites: produce in US or pay tariffs
- Progressive politics and nepo 'babies': five Oscar takeaways
- American Airlines shares fall on lackluster 2025 profit outlook
- France to introduce new sex education guidelines in schools
- Wall Street's AI-fuelled rally falters
- Drinking water in many French cities contaminated: study
- After Musk gesture, activists project 'Heil' on Tesla plant
- ICC prosecutor seeks arrest of Taliban leaders over persecution of women
- Syria's economy reborn after being freed from Assad
- Shoppers unaware as Roman tower lurks under French supermarket
- Stocks mainly rise after Wall Street's AI-fuelled rally
- Singer Chris Brown sues Warner Bros for $500 mn over documentary
- J-pop star Nakai to retire after sexual misconduct allegations
- Leaky, crowded and hot: Louvre boss slams her own museum
- WWF blasts Sweden, Finland over logging practices
- How things stand in China-US trade tensions with Trump 2.0
- Most Asian markets rise after Wall Street's AI-fuelled rally
- Fire-hit Hollywood awaits Oscar nominees, with 'Emilia Perez' in front
- New rider in town: Somalia's first woman equestrian turns heads
- Most Asian markets extend AI-fuelled rally
- Bangladesh student revolutionaries' dreams dented by joblessness
- Larry Ellison, tech's original maverick, makes Trump era return
- Political crisis hits South Korea growth: central bank
- Photonis Launches Two Market-Leading Solutions to Advance Single Photon Detection and Imaging Applications
- Les Paul owned by guitar god Jeff Beck auctioned for over £1 mn
- Musk bashes Trump-backed AI mega project
- Does China control the Panama Canal, as Trump claims?
- Yemen's Huthis say freed detained ship's crew after Gaza truce
- Mel B, Trump and Milei: What happened at Davos Wednesday
- Argentina's Milei says would leave Mercosur for US trade deal
- Fashion world 'afraid' of Trump, says Van Beirendonck
- P&G sees China improvement but consumers 'still struggling'
- Stock markets mostly higher as they track Trump plans, earnings
- Anti-Semitic acts at 'historic' highs in France despite 2024 fall: council
- Trump's meme coin venture sparks backlash
- Global green energy push likely to continue despite Trump climate retreat: UN
- Prince Harry settles lawsuit against Murdoch's UK tabloids
- Stock markets diverge tracking Trump plans
'I never corrupted anyone,' diamond magnate tells Swiss court
A French-Israeli businessman and diamond magnate insisted Wednesday he had never bribed anyone, as he sought to overturn his conviction in a vast corruption case involving mining rights in West Africa.
Beny Steinmetz, 66, told the Geneva appeals court he was innocent and "had done nothing wrong".
"I never corrupted anyone."
Steinmetz was found guilty in January 2021 of setting up a complex financial web to pay bribes to ensure his company could obtain permits in Guinea's southeastern Simandou region, which is estimated to contain the world's biggest untapped iron ore deposits.
He was sentenced by a Geneva court in 2021 to five years in prison and ordered to pay 50 million Swiss francs ($52 million) in compensation.
Wearing a grey suit and white shirt with his collar unbuttoned, Steinmetz told court president Catherine Gavin he was proud of the massive mining project Beny Steinmetz Group Resources, BSGR, had set up in Guinea, claiming it would have been hugely beneficial for the country.
"I am fully convinced that BSGR never crossed the red line," and the company had become victim to a local power struggle and corruption, he said.
Steinmetz, who maintained his innocence throughout the original trial, changed his lawyers and beefed up his communications team for the appeal.
- 'Pact of corruption' -
During the first trial, prosecutors convinced the court Steinmetz and two associates had bribed a wife of then Guinean president Lansana Conte and others in order to win lucrative mining rights in Simandou.
The prosecutors said Steinmetz obtained the rights shortly before Conte died in 2008 after about $10 million was paid in bribes over a number of years.
Conte's military dictatorship ordered global mining giant Rio Tinto to relinquish two concessions that were subsequently obtained by BSGR against an investment of $160 million.
Just 18 months later, BSGR sold 51 percent of its stake in the concession to Brazilian mining giant Vale for $2.5 billion.
But in 2013, Guinea's first democratically-elected president Alpha Conde launched a review of permits allotted under Conte and stripped the VBG consortium formed by BSGR and Vale of its permit.
To secure the initial deal, prosecutors claimed Steinmetz and representatives in Guinea entered a "pact of corruption" with Conte and his fourth wife Mamadie Toure.
- 'Local tragedy' -
Toure, who has admitted to having received payments, has protected status in the United States as a state witness.
A request from Steinmetz's lawyer Daniel Kinzer for her written testimony to be deemed inadmissible due to lacking insight into the "opaque" US deal, was rejected by the court.
The defence meanwhile maintains there was nothing inappropriate about how BSGR obtained the permits, and that Rio Tinto lost half the concessions for failing to develop them.
Steinmetz rejected suggestions his company was seeking to cash in and make "a quick exit", saying the BSGR and Vale consortium had planned to stay for the long term.
"This was not a 20-year deal, but a 50-year deal," he told the court, calling it "Africa's largest mining project" that would have included building a railway system.
It would have tripled Guinea's gross domestic product, he said.
The abandonment of the project was "a local tragedy, created by local corruption," according to Steinmetz, indicating Conde's decision to strip VBG of the rights was linked to promises made to secure his election.
M.García--CPN