Document #1079051
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Author)
Please find attached some documents which
provide information related to the bankruptcy of the Refisa
financial firm. Only minor references to the Reincorsa firm could
be found among the sources currently available to the IRBDC.
According to one of the documents, Peruvian
police had called on Interpol to help track down the officials of
the Refisa bank (Xinhua 8 July 1990). The source adds that the
police were looking for the bank's principals, who reportedly
"lured some 20,000 Peruvians into depositing their savings for high
interest rates, then apparently fled with 100 million dollars"
(Ibid.).
One of the attachments, published in a
Peruvian weekly newsmagazine, contains two articles related to the
Refisa and Reincorsa cases (Caretas 23 Jul. 1990). One of
the articles, "Caso Refisa: Petrocoima," reports on the attempted
bribery of a reporter offered by an alleged Reincorsa partner in
exchange for potentially damaging information which the magazine's
reporter claimed to have ("Petrocoima" is a word that does not
actually exist in Spanish: it combines the word "coima," which is
Peruvian slang for bribe, and the prefix "petro," which in this
case alludes to the Peruvian state oil company Petroperú)
(Ibid., 40-42). The magazine had contacted the attorney
general's office (Ministerio Público or Fiscalía),
which mounted an operation to capture those attempting to bribe the
reporter (Ibid., 43, 48). The members of the attorney's
office detained an employee of Daniel Nuñez, an official at
Petroperú who had been named by Manuel Zarzar as his partner
in the financial firm Reincorsa, reportedly based in Montreal
(Ibid., 40, 43, 48). The article includes pictures of the
brothers Manuel and Alfonso Zarzar, Daniel Nuñez and the
employee reportedly involved in the bribery attempt. The caption
beside the photographs of the Zarzar brothers states that they were
board members of Refisa and had been accused of defrauding the
Banking and Insurance Superintendency (Superintendencia de Banca
y Seguros, SBS) and bank customers who put their savings in
that bank (Ibid., 42).
The following issue of Caretas (30
July 1990) published two letters, one by Daniel Nuñez and
the other by a journalist who initially contacted the magazine's
reporter to inquire about information that the latter claimed to
have. In one of the letters, Daniel Nuñez denies involvement
in the alleged bribery attempt and states he publicly denied any
link with fraudulent activities by the Zarzar brothers and their
companies (Caretas
30 July 1990, 2). The magazine adds that the lawyer representing
the defrauded depositors had pressed charges against Nuñez
and the person who reportedly offered a bribe, for an offense
against the administration of justice (delito contra la
administración de justicia, according to the source)
(Ibid.). The journalist who initially contacted the
magazine's reporter clarifies in his letter that he only interceded
by phone as a favour to a friend who worked in Petroperú
(Ibid., 2-3). The magazine does not refute the contents of
either letter.
Another article published in Caretas
refers to a televised debate between the Minister of Economics and
the Superintendent of Banking and Insurance (Caretas 23 July
1990, 42-43). The article mentions the existence of approximately
120 financial institutions in Peru similar to Refisa, part of what
is called banca paralela (which could be translated to
"parallel banking system"). The article suggests that the parallel
banking system operated illegally, yet it appealed to many because
of the higher interests it provided for savings and the avoidance
of taxes levied, for example, on the chequing accounts of the legal
or "formal" banking system (Ibid.). The source states that
the SBS had pressed charges against several financial firms of the
parallel banking system since 1988 for operating illegally,
although the attorney general's office had dismissed all charges.
The attorney's office reportedly decided to take action only after
the notorious Refisa fraud became apparent (Ibid.).
Also attached, please find a brief report
published by the Lima Times of 13 July 1990. According to
this report, the name Refisa stands for Representaciones
Financieras S. A. ("S. A." stands for Sociedad
Anónima, a term that defines the legal setting of a
firm). The Lima Times report states that lawsuits against
the board of directors of Refisa had been "followed by a court
order to investigate three state attorneys suspected of delaying
the court cases" (Lima Times 13 July 1990, 5). The source
adds:
Refisa directors are accused of fraud, against 10,000 shareholders
who invested their savings estimated at a total of [US]$100mn and
have not been able to get their money back. The investors many of
them retired armed forces officers and civil servants put their
inti [Peruvian currency at the time the report was published; today
it is the Nuevo Sol] and dollar savings into Refisa for
interest rates of up to 19% every two months on $10,000, or up to
70% on some inti savings.
The first law suits presented by investors were shelved or delayed
in the courts for over a month before panic spread. Since then,
some of the directors have fled the country and the Refisa offices
have been virtually dismantled (Lima Times 13 July 1990,
5).
According to a researcher of the Andean
Commission of Jurists, the Refisa case was a notorious financial
scandal involving the Zarzar brothers, who apparently defaulted the
bank and fled the country (24 Apr. 1992). The source added that it
has often been speculated in Peru that some of the parallel banking
system's firms may be or may have been fronts for laundering
drug-trafficking profits, which could account for the high
interests some of them paid for deposits, although this may not
have been the case of Refisa (Ibid.).
Andean Commission of Jurists. 24 April
1992. Telephone Interview with Researcher.
Caretas [Lima]. 23 July 1990.
"Caso Refisa: Petrocoima" and "Fugas y Peleas."
_____. 30 July 1990. "Nos Escriben... y
Contestamos: Refisa y Soborno."
Lima Times [Lima]. 13 July 1990.
"Refisa Fraud Charges."
The Xinhua General Overseas News
Service. 8 July 1990. "Latin American News Briefs." (NEXIS)
Caretas [Lima]. 23 July 1990.
"Caso Refisa: Petrocoima" and "Fugas y Peleas."
_____. 30 July 1990. "Nos Escriben... y
Contestamos: Refisa y Soborno."
Lima Times [Lima]. 13 July 1990.
"Refisa Fraud Charges."
The Xinhua General Overseas News
Service. 8 July 1990. "Latin American News Briefs." (NEXIS)