Shell, Eni in fresh trouble as Nigeria begins moves to withdraw OPL 245 from Malabu, Dan EteteThe
Nigerian government is set to retrieve one of Africa’s richest oil
blocs from oil giants, Shell and Eni, PREMIUM TIMES has learnt.
Not
only will the two oil giants lose OPL 245, should President Muhammadu
Buhari approve the recommendations, they will also be fined billions of
dollars for illegal activities, including paying money to fraudulent
public officials and private citizens in order to secure the bloc.
The
retrieval of the controversial oil bloc, estimated to contain about 9
billion barrels of crude, as
well as placing heavy fines on the oil
giants, is contained in a far-reaching recommendation by the office of
the Director of Public Prosecution, DPP, Mohammed Diri.
The
recommendation was at the instance of the Attorney General of the
Federation and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami, who is set to
advise the federal government on how to proceed on a controversial deal
that is being investigated by authorities in four different countries.
In
arriving at its recommendations, the DPP committee, which included
lawyers from his office, called for the cancellation of the ‘settlement
agreement’ that ceded the oil bloc to Shell and Eni.
The ‘Settlement Agreement’
Made
on April 29, 2011, the settlement deal is made up of three different
‘Resolution agreement’ signed by the parties involved in the OPL 245
saga.
The first, titled “BLOCK 245 MALABU RESOLUTION AGREEMENT”
was signed between representatives of the federal government and those
of Malabu, which was represented during the discussions by a former
petroleum minister, Dan Etete.
The second agreement, titled
“BLOCK 245 RESOLUTION AGREEMENT” was between the Nigerian government and
officials of Shell and Eni/AGIP; while the third agreement, titled
“BLOCK 245 SNUD RESOLUTION AGREEMENT”, was signed by officials of the
Nigerian government and Shell.
The immediate past attorney
general of the federation, Mohammed Adoke, and immediate past petroleum
minister, Diezani Alison-Madueke signed all the agreements on behalf of
the federal government. Both are among officials being investigated by
Nigeria’s foremost anti-graft agency, the Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission, for their roles in the scam.
The agreements saw the
transfer of OPL 245, first from the Malabu to the Nigerian government
and then from the government to Shell and Eni. The agreements also
effectively cancelled all previous law suits and judgements related to
the case.
It was based on these agreements that Shell and Eni
paid a total of $1.3 billion into Nigerian government accounts, which as
stated in earlier reports by PREMIUM TIMES, largely ended up in
accounts of phoney companies and shady characters.
Cancel the agreement
The
committee empanelled by the Attorney General Malami recommended that
the agreement be cancelled, describing it as “null and void”, and saying
it “should not be given any legal effect by the FGN (Federal Government
of Nigeria) as doing so would amount to the FGN condoning and
perpetuating illegality.”
One of the reasons the panel consider
the agreement illegal is that the ex-convict, Mr. Etete, had no legal
authority to negotiate the agreement on behalf of Malabu as he was not a
shareholder of the company nor had the permission of the shareholders
to do so.
Also, the oil bloc was awarded to Malabu in furtherance
of Nigeria’s policy to encourage local companies and part of the
conditions for the award was that “foreign participation interest in the
blocks (OPL 245 and 214) shall not exceed 40%, i.e. 60/40 indigenous to
foreign;” a fact Shell was aware of but chose to ignore.
The
committee also sought the cancellation of the agreement based on a
resolution by the last House of Representatives, which called for the
cancellation and demanded that Shell be“censured or reprimanded… for its
lack of transparency and full disclosure in its bid to acquire OPL
245.”
Also, although Shell and Eni claimed they only struck an
agreement with the federal government and that they did not know, before
the agreement, that the money they paid was going to Malabu, evidence
by investigators in Italy and the Nigerian anti-graft agency, EFCC,
shows that the oil firms knew the payment was eventually going to Malabu
accounts controlled by Mr. Etete, a man once convicted for money
laundering in France.
Apart from calling for the cancellation of
the agreement, the DPP panel also recommended the full recovery of the
money paid by Shell and Eni, describing it as “proceed of crime.”
PREMIUM
TIMES had reported how the Federal Government paid over $800 million of
the money into accounts controlled by Mr. Etete and how Justice Edis of
the Southwark Crown Court in England refused to release $85 million of
the remaining sum to Mr. Etete in December.
Source: Premium Times
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