Banking sources have confirmed the accuracy of our observation that the letter of "Gliding" Ltd from Amsterdam, which guarantees that Dan Diaconescu has 45 million Euros available in an account with HSBC is not credible, first of all because letters of guarantee can't be accepted when they come from just about any company.
On September 28th, in the article "The privatization of Oltchim, according to the plan of Constantin Roibu (through "Harry Potter"), published in BURSA, I wrote: "...let us note that the letter of an offshore which guarantees that Dan Diaconescu has the money in his account, has no relevance in the process for the privatization of Oltchim, because it is not a letter sent by the bank itself".
Second of all, the letter, being signed by Ewoud L. Peerbolte, that letter starts to look like a grotesque joke, because even though Ewoud Lietaert Peerbolte is mentioned on http://www.corporationwiki.com, as having ties to "Princess Beach" I and II, Inc., of San Diego, and on other websites as being the owner of a financial services company based in Holland, it is also the name of a lawyer and sci-fi writer who, in 2011, was involved in a scandal in Amsterdam, when he participated in an important call for tenders, only to then become unavailable for months.
The letter presented by Dan Diaconescu and officially submitted to Eximbank, states that "Gliding" Ltd. Amsterdam (whose CEO is Ewoud Peerbolte), allegedly has an account with a balance of 46 million Euros opened with HSBC Bank, assigned/granted to Dan Diaconescu, for the privatization of "Oltchim" - in favor of Dan Diaconescu.
In fact, Eximbank checked with HSBC, and neither "Gliding" Ltd., nor Ewoud L. Peerbolte have accounts opened with that bank.
Moreover, the company in question isn't even registered in Holland (the termination for Dutch companies is Bv., not Ltd., anyway.