Jonathan's Aide, Three Other Ex-Nigerian Officials Named In $20million Bribery Scandal In Switzerland
Three
former top officials of the Nigerian Ports Authority and a former special
adviser to President Goodluck Jonathan have been named in a massive foreign
bribery scandal that has led to the conviction of a company and some of its top
officials in Switzerland, PREMIUM TIMES can exclusively report today.
Dredging
International Services (Cyprus) Ltd was sentenced to a fine of one million
Swiss Francs and asked to refund 36 million Swiss Francs illegal profit after
it was indicted for allegedly making illicit payments to a former Managing
Director of the NPA, Adebayo Sarumi; a former Managing Director of NPA’s
Eastern Ports, Felix Ovbude; a former Executive Director of Finance at the NPA,
Abba Murtala Mohammed; and Daniel Afam-Obi, a former executive assistant to
Sullivan Akachukwu Nwankpo who was ex-President Goodluck Jonathan’s special
adviser on technical matters.
Investigators
believe Mr. Afam-Obi acted on behalf of Mr. Nwankpo.
While
Messrs Sarumi, Ovbude and Mohammed allegedly collectively received $2.6million
in kickbacks, Mr. Afam-Obi was said to have been paid $157,000 for unknown
reasons. Another $18million dollar was passed to companies in which some yet
unknown Nigerian officials have interests.
Dredging
International Services (Cyprus) Ltd is part of a consortium which formed The
Bonny Channel Management Limited that in turn entered into a joint venture arrangement
with the NPA to form The Bonny Channel Company saddled with “creating and
maintaining a safe navigational passage for all marine users to and in the
Eastern Ports of Bonny Island, Onne, Okrika and Port-Harcourt”.
The
NPA holds 60 per cent equity in the JVC while The Bonny Channel Management
Limited consortium (comprising Dredging International, Vinci, IPEM and Dapesa
Limited) has the remaining 40 per cent.
The
bribery scheme
Each
year, NPA awards the company contracts worth $70million without any open or
competitive bidding as required by Nigerian law, and the firm is believed to
have so far cornered jobs worth at least N717 billion.
Dredging International is a subsidiary of the Belgian group, Dredging, Environmental and Marine Engineering NV (DEME), which specializes in petroleum infrastructure and dredging, and has a turnover of two billion euros and employs 4,600 people worldwide. The French company VINCI is one of its main shareholders.
Dredging International is a subsidiary of the Belgian group, Dredging, Environmental and Marine Engineering NV (DEME), which specializes in petroleum infrastructure and dredging, and has a turnover of two billion euros and employs 4,600 people worldwide. The French company VINCI is one of its main shareholders.
[Nigeria
Port Authority, Tin Can Island Lagos]
In
an indictment dated May 1, 2017, the Swiss Federal Prosecutor’s Office (MPC)
said between 2006 and 2011, the company wired huge bribes to the companies in
which Mr. Sarumi and his colleagues were beneficial owners.
In
addition, according to the document issued by Federal Prosecutor Alice de
Chambrier, Dredging International, through its agent, transferred more than $18
million to nine offshore companies whose real beneficial owners are yet
unclear. The companies are Noble Gate Projects Ltd., Liam Engineering Nigeria
Ltd., Nianza Fze, Alfonsor Trading Corporation, Monogate Ltd., FIFC Management
And Development Ltd., Reinex Bureau of Change Ltd, Annacro Ltd., and Agro
Systems Ltd.
Dredging
had through two of its executives – Alexandre Maes (Chief Financial Officer)
and Christian Van Meerbeeck (Chief Legal Officer) – entrusted the treasury of
its Nigerian project to a Geneva-based asset management company, Driancourt
& Cie, and its director, Alain Driancourt. It was this asset management
company and its director that executed the complicated foreign bribery scheme
on its behalf.
In
arranging the illicit scheme, Mr. Driancourt of the asset management firm,
documents show, set up three offshore companies: Berndale Trading Ltd, with
accounts with Credit Suisse and EFG Bank in Geneva, as well as Bayhill Finance
Ltd and Dacklin Trading Ltd, each with an account with EFG Bank. The accounts
were regularly funded by Dredging International. The payment orders were given
by Alexandre Maes and Christian Van Meerbeck, then executed by Alain
Driancourt.
The
bribe payments, investigators said, began in 2007 after the NPA refused to pay
Dredging International $43 million for dredging work already done. To recover
this amount, the company elaborately organized the payment of several million
dollars to executives of the NPA and other officials in the hope that that
would push them to act.
And
for five years, as indicated above, more $20million were wired to companies in
which the named Nigerian officials are believed to be beneficial owners as well
as to firms whose real beneficial owners are yet to be determined (also listed
above).
As
required by Swiss laws, the bank Credit Suisse alerted authorities to these
suspicious transfers in 2011, and an investigation immediately commenced. The
investigation was initially entrusted to Prosecutor Félix Reinmann and then to
Olivier Thormann.
Switzerland
slams indictments
Dredging
International tried to justify the payments, with its lawyer, Marc Henzelin,
telling investigators, “Our clients admit to having engaged intermediaries
close to the government in 2007 to ensure the security of the local personnel
in the Delta when there were serious threats to their lives (kidnappings,
attacks and immobilizations of boats etc.).
“At the same time, our customers found
themselves in a situation of near-constraint when the Nigerian Port Authority,
contractually obliged to pay nearly $ 50 million to operators, blocked the
payments due. DISC regrets that it chose this solution at the time and has
fully cooperated with the Swiss criminal authorities.” The subsidiary of the
DEME group has since set up an “OECD” compliance system since the beginning of
the criminal procedure in 2011.
Despite
that explanation, the Swiss Prosecution Office indicted the company and
mandated it to pay a fine of 37million Swiss Francs. The company’s officials
directly involved in the bribery scheme were also convicted, with authorities
saying Alexander Maes and Christian Van Meerbeeck failed to “verify the
economic background of the payments they were ordering, even though the company
operated in a country where the risk of corruption was notoriously high.”
Christian
Van Meerbeeck received a bonus of 800,000 euros over the period, of which
40,000 was in connection with the Bonny Channel project. He will have to
reimburse 56,000 francs out of this sum, and pay 5,000 francs in procedural
costs. He is also sentenced to 12 days fine of 210 francs with suspended
sentence.
Alexandre
Maes received € 2.7 million in bonuses, including € 136,000 for Bonny Channel.
He was ordered to pay 197,000 francs, plus 5,000 francs in procedural costs. He
also received a 12-day fine with suspended sentence.
The
asset management company, Driancourt & Cie, had earlier in August 2015 been
ordered dissolved by regulatory authorities in Switzerland for its insufficient
controls in view of the risks of corruption in Nigeria. Its director, Alain
Driancourt, was also prohibited from practicing as a financial intermediary in
the country.
The
public prosecutor’s officers decided not to issue a compensatory fine against
Mr. Driancourt in view of the bankruptcy of his company. He was however
sentenced to 60 days fine of 150 francs per day with suspended sentence and
will have to pay 1000 francs of procedural expenses.
Nigeria
won’t prosecute
Switzerland
said it sought assistance from Nigeria and that the then Minister of Justice,
Mohammed Bello Adoke, replied that there was no case for criminal prosecution.
Sources
at the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) confirmed the
anti-graft agency received a request from Switzerland on the matter. “We
interrogated the named individuals, did other investigations and then forwarded
our findings to the Attorney General’s office for onward passage to the Swiss
embassy,” one of the investigators who handled the matter told PREMIUM TIMES.
“The
difficulty we had then was that the companies into which the monies were paid
were offshore ones, and they had no bank accounts in Nigeria. However, we sent
our report to the Attorney General but we had no idea what he told the Swiss.
We also did not hear back from the Swiss since then.”
Mr.
Adoke, who is wanted by the EFCC in connection with the Malabu Oil
investigation, has been out of Nigeria since the end of his tenure in May 2015,
and could not be reached to comment for this story. A source close to him,
however, quoted the former minister as saying everything he did while in office
was in compliance with Nigerian laws.
The
incumbent Attorney General, Abubakar Malami, did not answer or return calls.
Neither did he reply a text message sent to him.
The
Managing Director of NPA, Hadiza Bala Usman, said she was not aware of the
case, and that no one or agency had discussed the matter with her since she
assumed duties at the Authority on July 18, 2016.
Indicted
officials react
When
contacted by telephone, Mr. Ovbude, who is a now managing consultant with
Lagos-based Renaissance Consulting, first said, “I don’t know what they are
talking about.” But when he was told that the company which paid the bribe had
confessed, the former NPA official said, “I worked and many people worked. It’s
one thing to say you are specifically in charge, but the issue can come up and
you are exonerated.” When told that he was specifically mentioned in the charge
and that Dredging International had been convicted, he said, “I am not told, I
am not aware.”
Mr.
Sarumi’s telephone failed to connect Friday and Saturday. But he later replied
a text, saying he was traveling abroad and that our reporter should telephone
him again at 2 p.m. Nigerian time on Sunday.
He
kept that appointment, telling this reporter, “As far as I’m concerned, I am
not aware of the matter you are talking about. I hope we were not named just
because we represented NPA on the board of the joint venture company.”
He
then requested PREMIUM TIMES to furnish him with documents detailing the
indictments in Switzerland.
Mr.
Afam-Obi is yet to answer questions sent to him via Facebook by our reporter
while Mr. Mohammed could not be reached for comments.
Source>Sahara Reporters.
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