Italian Police Probing The Controversial Oil Block Funds
The police in Italy have launched an inquiry into Nigeria’s
most infamous deep water oil block, OPL 245.
By this action, they join the British, who in July last year
also began a probe of the allegation that money laundering may have been
involved in a $1.3 billion Nigerian oil bloc deal involving Royal Dutch Shell
and Italy's Eni SpA.
According to previous newspaper reports in Nigeria, the two
companies are alleged to have paid as much as $1.092 billion to the Nigerian
government, using a JPMorgan Chase Bank in London. The government had a parallel agreement to
pay the money to Malabu
Oil and Gas, which belonged to former Petroleum Minister Dan
Etete, according to a report of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission
(EFCC).
The money paid to Malabu Oil & Gas was then shared by some
private companies belonging to certain officials at the very heart of the
Jonathan presidency.
Last July, a British High Court ruled that Etete was indeed
the owner of Malabu Oil & Gas. In
effect, while he was a Minister under General Sani Abacha, Etete had cleverly
acquired the lucrative OPL 245.
Last month, an adhoc committee of the House of
Representatives set up to investigate the 2012 sale of the oil block to Shell
and Eni recommended that the government should revoke the licence, arguing that
the agreement violated Nigerian law.
Sources in Italy now say that the prosecutor’s office in
Milan say the track of the money paid by Eni became known because of civil
cases between Malabu Oil & Gas and mediators (Russian Agaev and Zubelum
Chukwuemeka Obi, a Nigerian).
The account further says that that in May 2011, a bonus of
$205 million was paid to the Nigerian government of Nigeria to cover up
disputes relating to the ownership of the block 245.
Although the
announcement from the Italian Prosecutor’s office in Milan said there are no
suspects yet, they are relying on wiretapping obtained from several Italy-based
ENI subjects namely : Henry John Woodcock, Francesco Curcio, Paulo Scaroni,
Luigi Bisignani and Eni 's General
Manager Claudio Descalzi.
In March 2011, President Goodluck Jonathan ordered the sum
of $1.1billion paid to Malabu oil
company account by ENI AGIP and Royal Dutch Shell, the monies were then shared
by entities close to President Jonathan, in particular the Attorney General of
the Federation, Mohammed Bello Adoke was fingered directly as Mr. Jonathan’s
front in receiving kickbacks.
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