AND THE BEAT GOES ON ... THE GEJ ADMINISTRATION STICKS TO BUSINESS AS USUAL : I only got N39 billion from fraudulent Malabu deal- Etete tells British court ... Nigeria’s Attorney General played a prominent role in the deal.
In
a desperate attempt to muddle-up facts, convicted felon, Dan Etete, has
told a British High Court that he is not the owner of Malabu Oil and
Gas and thus not the recipient of the $1.1 billion (N173 billion)
fraudulently transferred to Malabu by the Goodluck Jonathan
administration. The money was paid by oil giants, Shell and Eni, through
the federal government, to Malabu.
Mr. Etete, a former
minister of petroleum, told the court in a testimony he gave on a breach
of contract suit brought against him over the sale of the controversial
oil block OPL 245 that he only made N37.5 billion ($250 million)
working as a consultant for Malabu, the Economist is reporting.
PREMIUM TIMES had reported how Mr. Etete is the sole signatory into the
bank accounts that the federal government paid about $800 million (N126
billion) of the oil bloc sale into.
However, Mr. Etete, who
was convicted for money laundering in France in 2007, immediately
contradicted himself in the same testimony when he admitted to being the
sole signatory to Malabu’s account and couldn’t provide any evidence of
other shareholders.
“I put my blood, I put my life into this
oil block,” he said yet he denied owning OPL245. When presented with a
transcript of a recording where he said: “It’s my block” Mr. Etete
denied it claiming the transcript was inaccurate.
Malabu’s
Etete-appointed company secretary, Rasky Gbinigie, who claimed to be a
“family friend” of Mr. Etete insisted that he had “lost the firm’s copy
of the register of shareholders and all minutes of meetings, that there
was no written correspondence between him, the directors and the
shareholders, and that he had no documents to verify who put up the
company’s original share capital.”
Mr. Etete also admitted in
the court, what PREMIUM TIMES investigations had revealed, that the
infamous Kweku Amafegha who was named as Malabu’s “nominee director” was
an alias he uses constantly. According to him, he had open bank
accounts in the past that he always used when he went out for secret
missions internationally.
PREMIUM TIMES had exclusively
reported how Mr. Etete, then Petroleum Minister in 1998, violated
Nigerian laws by creating a fictional character, Mr. Amafegha, to be a
shareholder in a newly formed company, Malabu. He then awarded two oil
blocs, including the disputed OPL 245, to the company; which also had
Mohammed Sani, son of then military dictator, Sani Abacha, as a
shareholder.
Nondescript businessman, Zubelum Obi, owner of oil
consulting firm, Energy Venture Partners Limited, EVP, who is claiming a
N30 billion ($200 million) compensation for acting as middleman in the
sales of oil block OPL 245, brought the breach of contract suit against
Mr. Etete.
Adoke as Etete’s lawyer
Fresh fact also
emerged during the trial as to why Attorney General of the Federation,
Mohammed Adoke, played a prominent and dubious role in the fraudulent
transfer of N155 billion to Mr. Etete.
The documents show that
Mr. Adoke once worked as counsel to Mr. Etete. Sources knowledgeable
about both men said this was during and immediately after the military
era, when the ex-convict was still minister. Mr. Adoke’s spokesperson,
Ambrose Momoh, did not pick calls to his phone seeking to confirm the
prior relationship between both men.
Mr. Adoke has been
instrumental to the success of the illegal acquisition and sale of OPL
245 by Mr. Etete using his position as the nation’s chief law officer.
Following advice by Russian oil consultant, Ednan Agaev, to use the
Federal government as a conduit for the transfer to Mr. Etete, Mr. Adoke
willing obliged to make the shady deal sail through.
International pressure
Due to the murky nature of the deal and less-than-ethical role played
by international oil firms, ENI and Shell and following pressure from
anti-corruption campaigners such as Global Witness, the European Union
Parliament last Wednesday voted to make EU-based resources companies
disclose all payments of at least €100,000 (N21.5 million) on any
project. The Canadian government is also working on enacting laws
similar to the EU’s
Campaigners say this new rule will reduce corruption as well as enhance transparency in the extractive industry.
“The new transparency rules in Europe and the announcement from the
Canadian Prime Minister are two key advancements for anyone who cares
about fighting poverty, protecting investors, making markets more
efficient, or reducing corruption,” said Global Financial Integrity
(GFI) Director Raymond Baker.
“Our research shows that the
developing world loses roughly US$1 trillion per year to crime,
corruption, and tax evasion. This is a systemic problem caused largely
by the opaque, secretive global financial system. For citizens of
resource-rich countries, the new EU rules—as well as the potential
Canadian rules—will shine a light in places that need it most.”
The United States Department of Justice, DoJ, is also beginning to show
increasing interest in the Malabu deal with at least one of the parties
involved in the sale already contacted.
Nicholas Ibekwe
Published: June 14,2013
No comments:
Post a Comment