British police are investigating a
money-laundering allegation related to a big oil field bought by Shell
and ENI from Nigeria for $1.3 billion (€984 million), after most of the
cash they paid ended up in a company linked to a former Nigerian oil
minister.
The probe concerns offshore block OPL
245, which industry sources say contains up to 9.23 billion barrels of
crude – more than enough to keep China running for 2½ years – the
ownership of which had been in dispute for more than a decade.
“The
proceeds of crime unit is investigating a money-laundering allegation
in the UK in connection with OPL 245. The investigation is at an early
stage,” a UK spokesman said.
Transparency campaigners, who asked the UK
to look into the matter, assert that Shell and ENI used the Nigerian
government as a go-between to obscure the fact that they were dealing
with former oil minister Dan Etete, who also has a 2007 money-laundering
conviction in France related to bribes he was alleged to have taken
when in government.
In his capacity as oil
minister, Etete awarded block OPL 245 in 1998 for a payment of just $2
million to Malabu Oil and Gas, a company in which he played a prominent
role.
The critics claim that Shell and ENI, which
haven’t been accused of any legal wrongdoing, wanted to distance
themselves from Etete given his reputation and his involvement in the
original award of the oil block to Malabu.
A Shell
spokesman said it had purchased the block from the government, making
no payment to Malabu, and that it acted transparently and in accordance
with Nigerian law.
ENI declined to comment but it told shareholders in May that the transaction was with the government, not Malabu.
Etete was not contactable for comment. His lawyer did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
While
Shell and ENI say they bought the block from the Nigerian government,
for which they paid it $1.3 billion in 2011, Nigeria says it was helping
resolve an ownership dispute over the block between Shell and Malabu
and immediately transferred $1.09 billion from the sale to Malabu. The
government retained the remainder.
Etete had
awarded the block to Malabu during the rule of military dictator Sani
Abacha, whose son Mohammed and other close allies were shareholders in
the company. That deal was later annulled after the death of Abacha by a
new government that judged the award improper.
In
a UK court case brought by Emeka Obi against Malabu for unpaid fees
relating to his help in brokering the Shell/ENI deal, the judge in that
case, Justice Elizabeth Gloster, concluded in her ruling last week that
“From its incorporation and at all material times . . . Etete had a
substantial beneficial interest in Malabu.”
Etete
said he was only a consultant to the company, but he represented the
company in the court case and in all negotiations with the oil majors,
and he told the court he was the sole signatory to its accounts.
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