James Ibori, convicted
former Governor of Delta state was on
Monday reported by Reuters that the former governor, who is serving a
13-year jail term in the United Kingdom for fraud and money-laundering, hid
some of his assets in the oil firm,Oando; adding that money passed from Oando’s
accounts into Ibori’s Swiss accounts.
Prosecutor Sasha Wass
was quoted as telling the court that she would be presenting evidence that
Ibori had “asserted ownership of a large part” of Oando, Nigeria’s biggest
home-grown oil firm, which is listed in Lagos, Johannesburg and Toronto.
“The Crown will
assert that Oando is a company where James Ibori has hidden assets,” Wass said,
giving no further details.
One of the biggest
embezzlement cases seen in Britain, the successful prosecution of Ibori was
also a rare example of a senior Nigerian politician being held to account for
the corruption that blights Africa’s most populous country.
At the time of Ibori’s
sentencing in April 2012, Judge Anthony Pitts said the £50m that he had
admitted to stealing might be a “ludicrously low” fraction of his total booty,
which could be more than £200m.
The confiscation
hearing will shed further light on the scale of Ibori’s wealth and determine
whether he emerges from jail impoverished or still in possession of a large
enough fortune to regain a position of influence in Nigeria.
However, he was not in court on Monday and his lawyer,
Ivan Krolick, said Ibori did not wish to attend the confiscation hearing
although he would come to court to give evidence if necessary.
During his
sentencing hearing, the court heard that Ibori had acquired six foreign
properties worth £6.9m, a fleet of luxury cars including a Bentley and a
Maybach 62, and that he had tried to buy a $20m private jet. His three
daughters were attending a private school in rural England.
However, Mr. Ainojie
Irune, the Head, Corporate Communications, Oando Plc who spoke in Lagos, denied
the report that the jailed ex-governor owned a larger part of the oil company.
He said, “We state
categorically that Mr. James Ibori does not own ‘a large part of Oando’ and
that this statement is incorrect and misleading. Oando is a publicly traded
company listed on the Nigerian and Johannesburg Stock Exchanges and does not
and cannot control the trading in its securities on the floor of the respective
Exchanges.
“Based on our current
shareholding register, Mr. James Ibori’s shareholding stands at 443 shares out
of a total issued and paid up share capital of 6.8 billion ordinary shares,
which is clearly insignificant, and cannot be considered as ‘a large part of
Oando.’
“Oando also stated that
it does accept that sometime in 2004, in the normal course of its business, it
sold some of its foreign exchange earnings for naira and the recipient of the
US dollars was a company, which has now turned out to be one controlled by
James Ibori.
“At the time of the
transaction, this information was unknown to Oando. The total amount was $2.7m
made in three separate transactions over a period of about seven months. This
amount was insignificant considering the company’s turnover of approximately
$800m in 2004.”
No comments:
Post a Comment