Eni
and Shell stand accused of handing out bribes during the 2011 purchase of an
offshore oil block estimated to hold 9 billion barrels of crude, for US$1.3
billion
|
Oil giants Eni and Shell
go on trial in Milan on Monday, charged with bribery and corruption in the
purchase of an offshore oilfield in Nigeria.
AFP
report continues:
Eni
CEO Claudio Descalzi, his predecessor Paolo Scaroni and several officials from
Eni and Shell are among those facing the judge.
Ex-Nigerian
oil minister Dan Etete is also on trial.
Eni
— also charged with
corruption in Algeria in a separate trial — and Shell stand accused of handing out bribes
during the 2011 purchase of OPL245, an offshore oil block estimated to hold 9
billion barrels of crude, for US$1.3 billion.
Both
companies deny the charges against them.
"Eni
expresses its full confidence in the judicial process and that the trial will
ascertain and confirm the correctness and integrity of its conduct," the
Italian firm said in a statement.
The
agreement allegedly saw Nigeria's former president Goodluck Jonathan and his
oil minister Etete pocket bribes, according to corruption watchdog Global
Witness.
"Eni
and Shell closed the deal with the government without the involvement of an
intermediary. The money... was deposited into an account owned by the Nigerian
government," said Eni, which has regularly reaffirmed its trust in
Descalzi.
- Major litigation -
Descalzi
made it clear last year that Shell and Eni had not been "involved in the
government's decision on how to use the money".
Shell
also said it believed the judges would conclude there was no case against them,
adding "there is no place for bribery or corruption in our company."
The
2011 deal with the Nigerian government aimed to end years of litigation over
the OPL245 block between Shell and Dan Etete's Oil and Gas Malabu company.
A
former oil minister under the dictator Sani Abacha, Etete appropriated the
block in 1998, selling it to Malabu, a company he secretly owned.
The
licence was subsequently revoked by the government and then transferred to
Shell and then again to Malabu, resulting in major litigation.
After
taking office in 2010, President Goodluck Jonathan resumed negotiations on the
highly coveted block.
According
to Global Witness, the deal resulted in US$1.1 billion being paid into an
account in London opened by government officials — and going directly to Etete — and US$210 million to the
government.
- Email trail -
Email
exchanges between Shell management cited by Global Witness, and seen by AFP,
suggest that Shell was aware the money was likely to be funnelled to
individuals, including Etete and Jonathan.
"Etete
can smell the money," a Shell official wrote in 2010, while another said,
"the President (Jonathan) is motivated to see 245 closed quickly — driven by expectations about
the proceeds that Malabu will receive and political contributions that will
flow as a consequence."
Nigeria's
anti-graft agency, the EFCC, filed corruption charges against Shell and Eni in
March 2017, accusing 11 defendants, including Etete, of "official
corruption" in connection with the deal.
Current
president, Muhammadu Buhari, has pledged to fight relentlessly against the
"cancer of corruption" that plagues Africa's largest oil producer.
But
in a letter leaked in February from Justice Minister, Abubakar Malami, to
Buhari dating from September, the minister asked the president to interrupt the
EFCC investigation.
In
the letter Malami expressed concern that the case did not contain enough
evidence to bring the main defendants to justice and that a trial would be an
embarrassment for the country and could put off potential investors.
Global Witness called for justice, saying that "US$1.1 billion can help a lot of people in a country like Nigeria" where "80%of citizens live on less than two dollars a day".
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