The media reported that there was a connection between Saad Hariri’s resignation and the Prison Chain Prisons, senior ministers and senior officials in Saudi Arabia.
The newspaper wrote that the interrogations were about Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri’s suspicions of money laundering from Oger, which Hariri inherited from his father, in that hand, according to Al-Ansar.
According to information from the French newspaper, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman hopes to redeem property worth $ 100 billion with a campaign called “Fighting Corruption”. These are properties that have been acquired by influential figures called “Abdullah’s group,” which refers to King Abdullah of the former kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
According to the report, the property was obtained before the death of King Abdullah, a large part of which was announced at the Saudi-owned company Oger (which declared bankruptcy late last July), and the bin Laden business group (who, after the collapse of the crane in the Hajj pilgrimage two years Ahead of financial crises) was achieved through money laundering.
If we go back a few months, we see that the two companies simultaneously witnessed economic crises, which resulted in the expulsion of thousands of employees from these companies. Even after the two companies suffered from a liquidity crisis, unrest and riots took place from their employees and those who demanded their property.
The report added that Hariri’s arrest in Saudi Arabia was seen as intermingling with Saudi Arabia as a witness to ongoing investigations. As the Attorney General of Saudi Arabia has said in his previous statements, this is the result of three years of investigation.
Dozens of former French employees at Oger Company rejoiced Hariri’s visit to Paris on Nov. 18, to re-apply for repayment of their debts, which they said were nearly 20 million euros, given that a company that has a larger share of these debts Has declared bankruptcy.
Earlier this month, Hariri resigned from Lebanon’s prime minister’s post in Saudi Arabia. In Arabia, Hariri provided his wealth, and in 1994 the Saudi Arabian company Ogar inherited his father, Rafiq Hariri, a former Lebanese prime minister who was assassinated in 2005, established it in the seventies of the last century.
But the booming company, which carried out huge construction projects, was hurt by the deterioration of the price of oil that stopped construction projects from mid-2015 and quickly lost its power as a debt-absorbing company.
And as a result, the debt of nearly 50,000 employees from 30 different nationalities was incapacitated. Of these, the 240 French were also creditors, some of whom were unable to pay rentals or school fees for their children, and could not leave Saudi Arabia before they were in a position to address their situation.