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Tuesday, September 09, 2025
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US set to ease travel restrictions on African leader accused of corruption

publish time

06/09/2025

publish time

06/09/2025

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Vice President of Equatorial Guinea, Teodoro Nguema Obiang Mangue, addresses the 79th session of the United Nations General Assembly, on Sept 26, 2024, at UN headquarters. (AP)

WASHINGTON, Sept 6, (AP): The Trump administration is set to give an African leader accused of pilfering his impoverished country's resources to feed a lifestyle of luxury cars, mansions and superyachts a temporary pass on US corruption sanctions to travel to a high-level UN gathering in New York and visit other American cities.

Two US officials familiar with the matter said the State Department is processing a one-month sanctions waiver for the vice president of Equatorial Guinea, Teodoro "Teddy” Nguema Obiang, following recommendations that it is in the US national interest to blunt growing Chinese influence in the West African country and boost American oil and gas business interests there.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss internal administration deliberations. The waiver would allow Obiang - notorious among world leaders accused of corruption for a lavish lifestyle that has attracted the attention of prosecutors in several countries - to travel to cities outside of New York. That includes Miami and Los Angeles, where he has owned property and luxury vehicles, some of which he has had to forfeit in legal proceedings.

While moving to ease restrictions for a much-prosecuted African leader, the Trump administration has cracked down on visas for large numbers of foreigners, including revoking or denying them to people it deems undesirable who are already in the United States or seeking to travel here. That includes denying visas to Palestinian Authority leaders to come to the UN meeting this month and considering restrictions on delegations from Iran, Brazil and elsewhere.

Obiang is son and heir apparent to the aging leader of Equatorial Guinea, an impoverished but oil- and gas-rich former Spanish colony. He is in charge of national defense and security and has long faced sanctions from the US and other countries. His father, Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, is Africa’s longest-serving president. He has been in power since 1979 and is accused of widespread corruption and authoritarianism.

Despite its oil and gas riches, at least 70% of Equatorial Guinea’s nearly 2 million people live in poverty, while officials, their families and cronies are accused of plundering state resources. Teddy Obiang in 2017 was convicted of embezzling millions of euros by a French court, which handed him a three-year suspended sentence, a 30-million euro fine and ordered the seizure of his luxury homes and cars in France worth tens of millions of euros.