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Thursday, 2 October 2014
Report: Nigerians got $533m bribe in ENI oil deal
Italian prosecutors investigating state-backed firm
ENI SpA over the purchase of a Nigerian oil field
three years ago allege that at least half of the $1.1
billion paid was used to bribe local politicians,
intermediaries and others, according to official
documents and a person close to the
investigation.
The Milan prosecutors have placed the Italian oil
company, its former chief executive Paolo Scaroni
and CEO Claudio Descalzi under investigation for
alleged international corruption surrounding the
deal for the OPL 245 offshore oil field concession.
ENI and both managers, neither of who has been
charged, have denied any wrongdoing.
Calling on their United Kingdom (UK) counterpart
to assist in freezing suspect assets, Italian
prosecutors said in a letter to the UK’s Crown
Prosecution Service (CPS) seen by Reuters that at
least $533 million was paid to Nigerian officials
and intermediaries who helped secure the sale.
The case has been a setback for the government
of Prime Minister Matteo Renzi, because Italy’s
39-year-old leader hand-picked company veteran
Descalzi to run Eni as part of a recent
management overhaul at the country’s state-
controlled companies. Renzi has publicly
supported Descalzi and said no conclusions
should be drawn before the investigation is
completed.
ENI and Royal Dutch Shell, which is not under
investigation, bought the rights to the OPL 245
offshore oil licence block from the Nigerian
government in 2011.
Production from the deepwater oil field is
expected to begin in 2016 with the field estimated
to hold up to 9.23 billion barrels of crude,
equivalent to nearly a quarter of the country’s
total proven reserves, according to industry
figures.
An aide to Renzi told Reuters the case involving
Eni, which is Italy’s biggest company by market
capitalisation and the state’s biggest asset, was
“not a big cause for concern at the moment”.
As part of their investigation, the Italian
prosecutors in May asked the UK’s CPS to freeze
$85 million in assets related to a Nigerian
company, Malabu Oil & Gas, that prosecutors say
was involved in the sale, according to a copy of
the official request sent by the Milan investigators
and seen by Reuters.
In the letter, the Italian prosecutors alleged that
Scaroni and Descalzi oversaw the payments to
parties who helped secure the sale. In a second
letter they alleged that some of the ultimate
recipients of alleged bribes used the money to
buy aircraft and armoured cars.
“We are investigating many money transfers to
many people in various countries who received
sums that vary from millions of dollars to
thousands of dollars,” the prosecutors said in the
follow-up letter, seen by Reuters.
In response to the requests London’s Southwark
Crown Court last month granted an order to seize
the $85 million in assets related to Malabu,
according to a judicial source.
London’s Metropolitan Police has also been
investigating aspects of the Nigerian deal since
last year. A police spokesman said the inquiry into
allegations of money laundering is continuing.
Descalzi and Scaroni, in statements and through
their lawyers, denied that they were involved in
any illegal behaviour. Descalzi also told Eni
employees in an email seen by Reuters that he
had not engaged in any wrongdoing.
After a board meeting last week, ENI also
reiterated that the company had not engaged in
any wrongdoing and that it had “full confidence
that Descalzi had acted properly.”
The OPL 245 block licence has long been the
subject of dispute. It was first awarded a decade
ago by military dictator Sani Abacha to Malabu Oil
& Gas for a publicly-stated $20 million.
After the death of Abacha, a new Nigerian
government annulled the deal. Malabu’s licence
was reinstated in 2006.
Reuters was not able to locate Malabu for
comment, and it is unclear whether the company
still exists.
The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission
(EFCC), did not reply to questions sent by Reuters
asking about the investigation by Italian
prosecutors.
Shell, which is not under investigation in any case,
released a statement saying: “Shell companies
have acted at all times in accordance with both
Nigerian law and the terms of the OPL 245
resolution agreement with.”
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