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GAP said:On another note, there are rulers/rulers relations that have brought stuff like this on simply because of similiar stupidity as shown in the article below.....
A Princely Collection of Rotting Cars
The air conditioning was off, but the tropical sun was not, so the Ferraris and McLaren F1s sat and cooked
As appeared in:
Sports Car Market—March 2011 issue Sheehan Speaks by Michael Sheehan
Article Link
Imagine seeing hundreds of high-end Ferraris, Lamborghinis and McLarens—many with hardly any miles on the odometer—rotting away in tropical heat and humidity.
While much has been written of the Sultan of Brunei’s car collection—and there are no lack of spy photos of the collection on the Internet—the estimated 2,500 cars are actually not the Sultan’s. They were the property of Prince Jefri, the Sultan’s third brother. As the Minister of Finance for Brunei (until 1997) Prince Jefri controlled the revenue from oil and gas through the BIA or Brunei Investment Authority and a network of companies under the name Amadeo.
...
The local officials have no to plans to save or to sell the collection, and the cost to turn it into a tourist attraction would be staggering. Over the last eight years less than a dozen significant cars have left, most as gifts to well-connected expats. Another few hundred pedestrian Mercedes-Benzes have been given to Brunei locals, but the bulk of the collection is still there and will die there, rotting into oblivion.
end
One needn't be Muslim or even Arabic to squander a nation's wealth and mark oneself for a noose when, inevitably, the chickens come home to roost; see this:
Son of African strongman plans $380-million yacht
GEOFFREY YORK
JOHANNESBURG— From Tuesday's Globe and Mail
Monday, Feb. 28, 2011
The top-secret project, codenamed Zen, would produce a luxury yacht at an astounding cost of $380-million. English-designed and German-built, it would be the second-most expensive private yacht in the world, equipped with a cinema, swimming pool, bar, restaurant and helipad.
But the real shocker is the man who commissioned the plans. According to an investigation by a human-rights group, the yacht was ordered by the President’s son in Equatorial Guinea, a small African nation where 60 per cent of the population struggles to survive on less than a dollar a day.
The 118-metre-long luxury yacht, modelled on the $1.2-billion yacht of Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich, would cost almost three times more than the country spends annually on health and education combined. It would be merely the latest extravagance of Teodorin Obiang, son of the long-ruling dictator of Equatorial Guinea, an oil-rich country where poverty and illness are widespread ...
Meanwhile, Canada sent only $710,000 - barely enough for two yachts - to Equatorial Guinea in 2008/09 according to CIDA.
Equatorial Guinea is a predominantly Christian nation; it is part of La Francophonie.