Skip to content
Author
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

* Former Libyan oil boss could not swim

* Found dead in the Danube

* Had defected from Gaddafi in last phase of uprising

(Adds description of scene, quotes)

By Michael Shields and Alex Lawler

VIENNA/LONDON, May 1 (Reuters) – The mysterious drowning of

Muammar Gaddafi’s former oil boss in Vienna has shaken friends

and colleagues, who say they suspect enemies may have hunted

down and killed the man who knew more than anyone else about the

Libyan dictator’s billions.

The body of Shokri Ghanem, who served for a time as

Gaddafi’s prime minister and ran the Libyan oil industry for

years, was found floating in the Danube River on Sunday morning

a few hundred metres from his home, fully clothed.

According to police he drowned, possibly having fallen into

the river after a heart attack while on an early morning walk.

Preliminary autopsy reports show no sign of foul play.

Friends say he did not know how to swim, and they had warned

him to be careful of enemies in his Austrian exile.

Ghanem, 69, was one of the most powerful men in Gaddafi’s

Libya – effectively controlling the purse strings of the

government and the Gaddafi family – until he defected to the

opposition in May last year as rebels bore down on Tripoli.

His decision to switch sides was a turning point in the

uprising that eventually drove Gaddafi from power. The former

Libyan leader was eventually caught by rebels and lynched.

Ghanem moved to a comfortable exile in Vienna, headquarters

of OPEC, where two daughters live with their families. He was

still closely associated with Gaddafi’s rule by Libya’s new

leaders and had ruled out returning home.

He would have had enemies among Gaddafi’s opponents because

of his years at the centre of power, as well as among the late

leader’s friends and kin because of his decision to defect. And

he would have had unrivalled knowledge of years of oil deals

worth tens of billions of dollars.

Friends doubted the official account of his death.

“I thought that was ridiculous. You don’t go down to the

Danube, have a heart attack and fall into the river,” said a

former oil minister of another OPEC country who had remained a

close friend of Ghanem.

His body was found at 8:40 a.m., floating near a promenade

on the Danube, an area lined with bars and restaurants, where

Viennese gather in the summer to sunbathe and drink beer. Police

say he had been in the water a few hours, since about dawn.

There is no rail along the water’s edge, and it was not the

first time a dead body had been found floating there.

“We didn’t know who it was. We thought it could have been

someone who had too much to drink and fell into the water: that

happened a few years ago,” said Moussa Rembetiko, who has run a

Greek restaurant there for 14 years.

Atlan Yalvac, manager of the Fish Tower grill, said he had

arrived to open the restaurant on Sunday morning and found

police standing around the body, which lay on the pavement where

they fished it out. “It was horrible. Terrible.”

“NORMAL LIFESTYLE”

Those who knew Ghanem universally describe him as a cheerful

character, quick with a joke. Friends said that exterior hid a

wary mind, forever worried about threats to his safety but

determined to try to lead a normal life in his Austrian exile.

“Given where he was, yes I think I would be worried. Without

any doubt, I would have been very worried. In fact I think he

said at times he felt he was being followed. But that might have

been his imagination, who knows,” said the former OPEC minister,

who asked not to be identified.

“He used to go around Vienna on the streetcar, on the bus.

He wasn’t hidden and had a chauffeur day and night, nothing of

the sort. In that sense he tried to maintain a normal

lifestyle.”

Friends had advised Ghanem to be cautious, said Issam

Chalabi, who ran Iraq’s oil industry in the 1980s and had

recently set up a consultancy with Ghanem in Vienna.

“We used to tell him, ‘be careful, keep a low profile’,” he

said. “The problem is that he angered the previous regime

because he had defected and the new Libyan leadership did not

approve of him because he was involved with opaque contracts.”

Like others, Chalabi was unconvinced by the official

account. “For him to be found in the River Danube, in the

morning, fully clothed – you know that he doesn’t swim, he can’t

have fallen just like that. I think we have not heard the end of

the story,” Chalabi told Reuters.

“The one who pushed him knows that he cannot swim.”

HEALTH TESTS

There were suggestions that Ghanem had health problems.

Nihal Goonewardene, a Wasington-based friend of Ghanem’s since

graduate school in Boston, said Ghanem had told a houseguest on

Saturday evening that he was not feeling well and left early on

Sunday for a walk from which he did not return.

A few days before, he had told a friend that he had recently

had a series of medical tests and was concerned about getting

bad results, Goonewardene told Reuters.

For now, the family has said little in public. Ghanem’s

nephew, Loayi Ghanem, told Reuters an autopsy would be carried

out on Wednesday and the family hoped to bring the body back to

Libya on Thursday. A man who answered the telephone at Ghanem’s

home said the family did not wish to speak about the incident.

Austria’s Krone tabloid quoted a daughter as saying “for us

it is 90 percent (probable) that the cause was a heart attack”.

Ghanem, who was also close to Gaddafi’s son Saif al-Islam,

was privy to potentially damaging information including on oil

deals with Western governments and oil companies. Such deals are

now under investigation by Libya’s new leaders.

As chairman of Libya’s National Oil Company (NOC) since

2006, Ghanem helped steer Libya’s oil policy and held the

high-profile job of representing Libya at OPEC meetings in

Vienna.

It was a time when Libya was being accepted back on the

international stage after decades as a pariah. Western countries

were hoping Gaddafi and Saif al-Islam would carry out reforms.

Their companies were signing huge contracts.

“I think he knows more about what really went on in NOC than

anyone else alive – not alive now, he’s dead,” said the former

OPEC minister who asked not to be named. “Obviously there are

matters there that would not pass muster in a normal society.

Where was all the money going?”

In 2009 Ghanem quit briefly, but returned to work for the

Gaddafis until the weeks before their downfall.

“As head of NOC, he was seeing all the income Libya had. And

this family of Gaddafis, as time went on they wanted more and

more money. One of them came and asked for a billion dollars,

that’s when he resigned,” said the former minister.

“I think at that moment he was terribly worried. What I have

never known is why he went back.”

(Reporting by Michael Shields in Vienna, Alex Lawler and Samia

Nakhoul in London, Tom Heneghan in Paris and Marie-Louise

Gumuchian and Ali Shuaib in Tripoli; Editing by Peter Graff)