Mr
Jonathan says allegations are meant to tarnish his international reputation. Getty
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Nigeria's former President
Goodluck Jonathan has denied allegations that he received US$200m (£160m)
from the US$1.3bn payments made by international oil companies for access to a
prime oil block off the coast of the Niger Delta, Punch newspaper reports
BBC
Africa Live report continues:
His
media adviser, Ikechukwu Eze, said in a statement that the allegations are
"fake news" meant to "tarnish his rising profile in the
international community".
Mr
Jonathan said he did not know Dan Etete, a former oil minister and the
architect of the controversial deal, who received a huge chunk of the payments
from oil giant Shell for the lucrative oil block, which he owned:
The
report also wrongly claimed that ‘Jonathan and Etete’ had known each other for
years, according to Shell staff, when Jonathan served as a tutor to Etete’s
children while he was a minister.”
Shell
has denied any wrongdoing.
Nigeria's
government passed on US$1.1bn of the money paid by Shell and the Italian firm ENI
to a company called Malabu, which was controlled by Mr Etete, according to
Italian prosecutors.
Documents
filed by the Italian prosecutors claim that US$466m of that sum was then
laundered through bureaux de change and passed on to then President Goodluck
Jonathan, and members of his government.
Mr
Jonathan's spokesman says the oil deal predated his administration:
Common
sense should have shown the purveyors of this slander that the Malabu oil deal
far predated the Jonathan regime and it would only make sense for him to be
bribed if he had a time machine to go back in time to when the deal was
struck.”
Shell Admits
Dealing With Money Launderer
News reports that Shell has admitted for the first time it dealt with a
convicted money-launderer when negotiating access to a vast oil field in
Nigeria.
It
comes after emails were published showing Shell negotiated with Dan Etete, who was
later convicted of money laundering in a separate case.
Shell
and an Italian oil company paid US1.3bn (£1bn) to the Nigerian government for
access to the field.
Investigators
claim US$1.1bn was passed to a firm controlled by Mr Etete.
Shell
and the Italian firm ENI agreed a deal with the Nigerian government for the
rights to exploit OPL 245, a prime oil block off the coast of the Niger Delta.
The
government passed on US$1.1bn of the money to a company called Malabu, which
was controlled by Mr Etete, according to Italian prosecutors.
Documents
filed by the Italian prosecutors claim that US$466m of that sum was then
laundered through bureau de change and passed on to the then president,
Goodluck Jonathan, and members of his government.
When
questioned in the past, Shell has claimed that it only paid money to the
Nigerian government, which took the form of a sum to settle the long-running
legal dispute which had raged over the ownership of OPL 245.
But
a spokesman has now said Shell had engaged with Malabu and Etete before signing
that deal.
"Over
the course of several years, Shell made repeated attempts to fully establish
and understand Malabu's ownership structure, including the exact role of Mr
Etete in Malabu," he said.
"Over
time it became clear to us that Etete was involved in Malabu and that the only
way to resolve the impasse through a negotiated settlement was to engage with
Etete and Malabu, whether we liked it or not. This was consistent with the
Federal Government of Nigeria's (FGN) position.
"From
the complex multi-party negotiations that followed, we knew the FGN would
compensate Malabu to settle its claim on the block. We believe that the
settlement was a fully legal transaction with the FGN," he added.
'Changed
its tune'
The
change comes after Global Witness and Finance Uncovered, two anti-corruption
charities, published emails seen by the BBC which showed that Shell
representatives were negotiating with Mr Etete a year before the deal was
signed.
One
of the emails was copied to Shell's chief executive at the time, Peter Voser,
showing knowledge of Mr Etete's involvement went right to the top at Shell.
Rachel
Owens, a campaigner at Global Witness, said: "Shell have always said that they
only paid the Nigerian government. Today Shell has changed its tune."
At
the time Shell struck the deal for OPL 245, it was under a deferred prosecution
agreement with the Department of Justice in the US, settling a case under the
Foreign Corrupt Practices Act for US$30m.
Under
the terms of its agreement, it had to toughen up internal controls and stay in
line with the US' tough anti-corruption laws.
Representatives
of Peter Voser declined to comment. ENI said there was no credible evidence any
of its staff were involved in wrongdoing.
A
spokesperson for Goodluck Jonathan told the BBC that no charges or indictments
have been brought or secured against the former president relating to this
transaction and described the allegations as a "false narrative".
The BBC is still awaiting comment from Dan Etete, but he has previously denied any wrongdoing.
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