SO eager was Monaco to be removed from the "black list" of tax havens under scrutiny by the G20 summit last week that it has opened an investigation into bank accounts suspected of sheltering the ill-gotten gains of Third World dictators.
Prince Albert, Monaco's ruler, ordered an unprecedented investigation into several accounts in the name of Edith Bongo, the deceased wife of President Omar Bongo of Gabon and daughter of President Denis Sassou-Nguesso of Congo.
The aim was to show the willingness of Monaco, which has been singled out by Europe as being "uncooperative" on banking secrecy, to enter a more respectable fold of countries willing to share the financial secrets of clients.
Albert is said to be deeply embarrassed by Monaco's reputation as a "sunny place for shady people", as the writer Somerset Maugham described it.
His latest initiative does not seem to have worked: Monaco remains on a "grey list" of countries that have yet to bring their banking in line.
The Congo government said it was "scandalised" by suggestions that accounts in Monaco containing a total of £50m included money looted by its president or the president of Gabon.
The 72-year-old Bongo, it emerged, had bought a fleet of limousines for Edith. Payment for some of the cars came directly from the treasury of Gabon.
Since her death last month, associates and relations of Bongo and Sassou-Nguesso have been trying to get access to the accounts held in her name.
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