Read This!!!
Friday, February 12, 2010 12:55 PM
From:
"Paul Gnaleko" gnalekpartners@freenet.de
To:
"la_black_roze"
Barrister Paul Gnaleko
Avenue du Colonel Parent
Libreville
Gabon .
Dear Sir/Ma’am,
This is an urgent letter seeking your sincere capability to partake in a mutual business transaction. I am making this contact with you after proper search for an honest partner from the European chambers of commerce and industries directory.
I offer you a further explanation of the business transaction: My client is Mr. François Bongo the son of the late. President of Gabon (El Hadj Omar Bango Odimba) who died recently of cardiac arrest from a Spanish hospital (http://blog.taragana.com/n/body-of-late-president-returns-to-gabon-78752/) wants to invest a huge amount of money in Europe .
Before the death of the President (Late.El Hadj Omar Bango), he deposited the sum of ($18.2Million) Eighteen million, two hundred thousand United States dollars in a diplomatic security firm in Europe . Now, my client has all the legal documents of the deposit of the money right in his possession and wants an honest partner to help him claim the funds from the security firm and assist him in investing the funds in profitable business in Europe .
Now, if you are capable and trustworthy to be a partner in this mutual business transaction, kindly indicate your interest by forwarding your full contact details.
On receipt of your details (i. Full names, ii. Private tel, mobile numbers) and I will then provide you with the necessary information needed in order to claim this fund.
I want to assure you that the transaction is without risk if due process is followed accordingly. Finally, an honorarium percentage will be given you for your assistance. I look forward to a favorable response.
Yours sincerely,
Mr. Paul Gnaleko
This is the news article from the link:
Body of late president returns to Gabon from Spain
LIBREVILLE, Gabon — Helicopters circled and security forces lunged forward to secure the plane Thursday as a Spanish Air Force jet carrying the body of the president of Gabon landed at the country’s international airport.
President Omar Bongo, 73, died Monday of cardiac arrest at a Spanish hospital, where he had been receiving treatment for an unspecified illness for some weeks. The Gabonese government kept his sickness a secret, becoming increasingly belligerent with reporters who wrote of his declining health and insisting until a few hours before his death that he was well.
Dignitaries — including his family, which is believed to include some 30 legitimate and illegitimate children — were at the airport to receive the body of the man that ruled this oil-rich nation for 42 years.
His body was driven from the airport to the presidential palace. Tens of thousands of people lined the highway to the palace and held up signs that said “Thank you Papa Bongo.” Bongo will lie in state until Wednesday, when the body is expected to be flown to Franceville, the capital of his native province, where he will be buried in a village named Bongoville.
Most of this country’s 1.5 million people have known no other president. Bongo came to power in 1967 in a back-room deal brokered by former French President Charles De Gaulle’s government.
As one by one countries in Africa began experimenting with democracy, Bongo tightened his grip on power. Opposition parties were outlawed until 1990 and he only allowed them after violent protests threatened his rule.
He is accused of using the country’s oil wealth as his personal slush fund. During a probe launched by the U.S. Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, officials at Citibank revealed that in just one calendar year, Bongo had deposited over $50 million into his New York account. Citibank officials said Bongo sent couriers to pick up suitcases of cash at oil companies operating in Gabon.
As the body made its way to the capital, it traversed one of the few paved roads in the country. Despite the hundreds of millions of dollars of oil pumped out of the nation’s soil each year, only one of roughly every 6 miles (10 kilometers) of road is paved and the nation’s people are considered among the world’s poorest.
I thought perhaps a little dose of "reality" was in order, so I sent this response:
Dear "Barrister Paul Gnaleko"
Send me your right ear in a little plastic bag and I'll consider it.
"Yours sincerely"
The Black Rose
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