Halliburton: Four Ex-heads Of State, 89 Others Indicted -
Despite the payment of fines by some companies, fresh facts emerged
yesterday that the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) may
soon bring prominent Nigerians implicated in the $180m Halliburton bribe
to justice.
About four former Heads of State and 89 prominent Nigerians were allegedly linked with the scandal.
In all, 76 prominent Nigerians are listed in the five notebooks submitted by the Halliburton Group to the EFCC.
There were indications yesterday that the anti-graft agency may quiz some of those listed.
A former Minister of Petroleum Resources has admitted collecting inducement from the bribery agent, Jeffrey Tesler/TSKJ.
It was learnt that about $2.5million was paid into the ex-minister’s account in Switzerland in 1998.
A
top source in EFCC said: “We are looking into all aspects of the
Halliburton scandal, including the bribe takers. This latest probe of
the scandal is comprehensive.”
According to a document
obtained by our correspondent, those implicated in the Halliburton
Notebooks are: Four ex-Heads of State; two former Chiefs of General
Staff, two ex-First Ladies; ex-CBN Governor; three former Military
Governors/ Administrators; a former Deputy Governor of CBN, 11 former
ministers(including two ex-Ministers of Petroleum Resources); two
retired permanent secretaries and three ex-NNPC GMDs.
Others are
ex-secretaries to the Government of the Federation; a former civilian
governor in the South-East; a former Ambassador to Italy, an ex-envoy to
Brazil, three ex-NNPC secretaries, a former Chief Security Officer to a
former Head of State; former MD, NLNG/Shell; former Chief of Army
Staff; a former Field Commandant of ECOMOG in Liberia; ex-MD of NAFCON;
and more than 13 former NNPC top shots.
However, some of the ex-Heads of State were claiming that they received gifts and not bribes, sources said.
The
report said in part: Following the submission made by Halliburton Group
of Companies a 500-page document in five notebooks on 2nd September,
2004 which was allegedly found in the archives of the London Office of
KBR by Halliburton’s Attorneys investigating this matter, a thorough
examination of the said notebooks was done.
“Although the
information contained in these Notebooks are not specific in terms of
amount allegedly collected by named Nigerian officials from officials of
TSKJ as an inducement for favours in the award of contract, it shed
light on this scam and confirmed the existence of some sort of
inducements shared by both officials of TSKJ and Nigerian Government who
were in position to influence the award of the contract.
“A
former Minister was a key player in this scam and had already admitted
to collecting money as inducement from Jeffrey Tesler/TSKJ to the
investigating magistrate in Paris.
“That the agreement between
Tri-Star Investment Ltd/Jeffrey Tesler/TSKJ for the executions of the
alleged bribery scandal making way for TSKJ as favoured contractor for
the award of the building and expansion of NLNG was signed and sealed on
22nd March 1995.
“The mandate of Tri-Star Investments was among
others to secure the award of the building and expansion project on
negotiated basis as opposed to participating in a competitive bidding
process. It was also to assist in maintaining of favourable
relationships with the client and any other government authorities;
“Based
on the extensive analysis of the Five Notebooks submitted by the
Halliburton Group and extensive investigations carried out so far, the
following facts are clearly established:-
(a.) That Jeffrey
Tesler was and is actually involved with several Nigerian Generals and
with people in authority in the past and present;
(b.) That
Jeffrey Tesler’s Tri-Star Investment Ltd entered into Consulting and
Commercial Promotion Services for the Nigeria LNG Project.
(c.)
That Jeffrey Tesler and others working in pursuance of the above
mentioned agreements did meet several Nigerian Government officials and
did pay gratifications/inducements/retro commissions/bribes to them in
the process.
These bribes were given to secure the NLNG contract
and maintaining favourable relationships with client and any other
governmental authorities;
(d.) That analysis of the Notebooks submitted by Halliburton Group of Companies mentioned several prominent Nigerians.”
The
$180million bribery scandal involved the former Halliburton’s
subsidiary, Kellogg Brown and Root (KBR) in respect of the nation’s
Liquefied Natural Gas plant in Bonny.
Albert J. Stanley admitted
before a Houston Court in the US on September 4, 2008 that he
orchestrated more than $180million in bribe to senior government
officials.
Stanley alleged that the bribe was channeled through a
UK based lawyer, Mr. Jeffery Tesler, in four installments of
$60million; $32.5million; $51million and $23million.
The bribe was allegedly facilitated between 1995 and 2005 in London.
The
countries where the bribe money was allegedly stashed by some top
government officials and their accomplices are France, the United
Kingdom, Switzerland, Portugal and Seychelles.
Tesler, 63, was in
February, 2012 sentenced to 21 months in Prison in the US after
pleading guilty to the offer of princely bribe sums to some Nigerian
Government officials with $132 million dollars between 1994 and 2004.
He also forfeited $149 million to US authorities under the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA).
About five companies indicted for the Halliburton scam have paid about $200million fines.
The
breakdown of the $200m remittances by the five companies was as
follows: Julius Berger ($35m); Siemens (Euros 30m); Snamprogetti ($30m);
Halliburton Energy Services ($32,500,000); and Japan Gasoline
Corporation ($26, 500,000).
The whereabouts of about $32.5million of the fines has led to the interrogation of some senior lawyers.
Those
who had been interrogated by the EFCC are a former President of the
Nigerian Bar Association, J.B Daudu (SAN), Mr. E.C Ukala (SAN) Chief
Godwin Obla (SAN), D.D. Dodo (SAN) and a top shot of the Nigerian
National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Mr. Roland Ewubare.
Also,
an Abuja High Court on March 27, 2013 struck out the case against six
Nigerian suspects arraigned over the Halliburton scandal.
Those set free were a former Permanent Secretary, Ibrahim Aliyu, Mohammed Gidado Bakari and four companies.
The four companies are Urban Shelter Ltd, Intercellular Nigeria Ltd, Sherwood Petroleum Ltd and Tri-Star Investment Ltd.
The
six accused persons had stood trial for allegedly serving as conduits
and receiving bribes in hard currency to facilitate natural gas
contracts between 1994 and 2005.
The trial judge, Justice Abubakar Sadiq Umar, said the prosecution had failed to diligently prosecute the case.
On
his part, Mr. Adeyanju Bodunde (a former Personal Assistant to
ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo) was still battling in the court to prove
his innocence over alleged $5million payments made to him between 2002
and 2003.
A former EFCC chairman, Mallam Nuhu Ribadu , who spoke
in Germany on the Halliburton scandal in February, expressed regrets
that the Halliburton scandal was frustrated in the country.
He
said “a gang of foreigners stole from Nigeria” from a $6 billion natural
gas contract won by a consortium of four international companies.
Ribadu
added: “I first got hint of the case in France. I got back home and
tried to investigate the case but it was very difficult or probably
impossible because the companies were not there in Nigeria, they didn’t
have account there, the people were not there. They had left.
“I
rushed back to Paris. I was in Paris many times. I put in a request
letter but after a year of trying to get French authorities to help us,
the investigation magistrate told me that they could not get anyone to
translate my letter from English to French. I knew it was a hopeless
case.”
He said after failing to get France, Italy and Japan to
help, he opted to go to the United States even though Dick Cheney, the
then US vice president, was on the board of Halliburton.
“The
Department of Justice in the United States took up the case. They
investigated and prosecuted the case. They placed a fine of over $1.5
billion on the company, the biggest in the world for corporate
corruption.”
He said some of the cases which the EFCC under his
watch referred to US Department of Justice, including those of Siemens
and Julius Berger, the US made over $3 billion in fines.
“But the
sad aspect is this, in my own country, where the criminal activity took
place, not a single person was made to face justice, especially after I
was asked to leave my position. Sadly Nigeria did not make a dollar out
of it,” he added.

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