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Mozambique Drops Appeal for Extradition of Ex-Finance Minister

Mozambique Drops Appeal for Extradition of Ex-Finance Minister

(Bloomberg) --

Mozambique’s Attorney General withdrew appeals to have the country’s former finance minister sent home from South Africa, where he is in custody over a $2 billion debt scandal.

Both the U.S. and Mozambique want South Africa to extradite Manuel Chang to face charges related to financial crimes. He’s been in custody in Johannesburg for more than a year since his arrest on U.S. charges. Chang, who’s denied wrongdoing, wants to face charges at home, and his government filed a competing extradition request shortly after the U.S. did.

South African Justice Minister Ronald Lamola put Chang’s extradition to Mozambique on hold in July after learning that he would have immunity from prosecution there. A Johannesburg court ruled in November that the decision whether to send Chang home must be made by the justice minister.

“The Attorney General’s office instructed its lawyers to withdraw the two pending requests in South African courts, in order to give the minister of justice the opportunity to re-examine the case, based on new developments,” it said in an emailed statement. The Mozambican government hoped the move would allow Lamola to send Chang home, the attorney general said.

--With assistance from Matthew Hill.

To contact the reporter on this story: Borges Nhamire in Maputo at bnhamire@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Gordon Bell at gbell16@bloomberg.net, Rene Vollgraaff, Andre Janse van Vuuren

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