Fresh details have shown a British executive
as a recipient of millions of pounds from the multi-billion dollar Malabu oil
deal.
Peter
Bosworth and trading firm, Arcadia Petroleum, have been named in multiple court
documents as among the recipients of funds from the deal, documents obtained by
Finance Uncovered, and The Times, have reported.
The
Malabu deal is the subject of criminal proceedings in Milan, Italy. Two
middlemen have been convicted in one case, while Shell and Eni, two
multinationals at the centre of the controversial deal, as well as some of
their officials are also being prosecuted.
The
deal is also the subject of civil action in the United Kingdom (UK), where
Nigeria has filed a High Court claim against the oil multinationals and JP
Morgan, the bank through which the funds were diverted.
Shell,
Eni, some of their ex-officials and two former Nigerian ministers, Chief Dan
Etete and Mohammed Adoke, are also being prosecuted in Nigeria for their roles
in the scandal.
Etete
was former Petroleum Affairs Minister and Adoke, former Attorney-General and
Minister of Justice.
Adoke,
through his lawyers, spoke of plans to seek judicial protection, as according
to him, whatever transpired while he forte the fault, was official.
Finance
Uncovered found that 55-year-old Bosworth and Arcadia Petroleum have been named
as having together received $16 million originating from the deal.
The
Malabu scandal involved the transfer of about $1.1 billion by oil
multinationals, Shell and ENI, through the Nigerian government to accounts
controlled by Etete.
From
accounts controlled by Etete, about half the money ($520 million) went to the
accounts of companies jointly controlled by Abubakar Aliyu, popularly known in
Nigeria as the owner of AA oil, and Mr Etete.
Anti-corruption
investigators and activists suspect Mr Aliyu fronted for top officials in the
administration of former President Goodluck Jonathan, as well of officials of
Shell and ENI.
The
transaction was allegedly authorised in 2011 by Dr. Jonathan through some of
his cabinet ministers, and the money was payment for OPL 245, one of Nigeria’s
richest oil blocks.
Although
Shell and ENI initially claimed they did not know the money would end up with
Etete and his cronies, evidence has shown that claim to be false.
Shell
later admitted it did know the money would go to government officials.
Shell,
Eni, Etete, Aliyu and several officials of the oil firms are being prosecuted
in Italy for their roles in the scandal.
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