Nigeria seeks Swiss help in $6.8 bln fuel Subsidy Probe
Afrik Update
News/Africa
Nigeria
By Emma Farge and Tim Cocks
News/Africa
Nigeria
By Emma Farge and Tim Cocks
Nigeria has sought Switzerland's help in
the West African nation's investigation of a multi-billion dollar fuel subsidy
scam, after some Swiss oil trading houses refused to cooperate with the
authorities in Abuja, Nigerian officials said.
Nigeria opened an investigation in January into fraud in the
administration of the subsidy scheme after an abortive attempt to remove it by
President Goodluck Jonathan.
Ibrahim Lamorde, chairman of Nigeria's Economic and Financial Crimes Commission
which is investigating the fraud, said a request was sent to Swiss authorities
in October after some trading houses declined to provide documents.
"They are not forthcoming. And most of the information is not in
their Nigerian offices," Lamorde told Reuters on Friday. He declined to
name the companies which did not cooperate.
Lamorde's commission is trying to unpick a web of collusion between fuel
importers and corrupt officials that has led to the state paying for nearly
double the amount of fuel it receives.
Asked if trading houses were themselves complicit in the fraud, he said:
"We just want information to confirm some of the things the (Nigerian
fuel) marketers have said ... whether they sold such products to the Nigerians
or not."
A parliamentary probe put the cost of the fraud to the Nigerian state at
$6.8 billion between 2009 and 2011, almost a quarter of the national budget.
As a result of the probe some Nigerian fuel importers have been charged
in courts but no one has yet been convicted, and most of the targets have been
relatively low level, rather than big players. Some are on the run.
The judicial authority for Geneva, home to many private trading houses,
said Switzerland had requested additional information on the probe from
Nigerian authorities.
"This case involves suspected subsidy fraud on imports of refined
products by Nigerian companies. They acquired the oil from companies based in
Geneva," a spokeswoman for the authority said in an emailed statement to
Reuters.
She added that Geneva-based trading houses were not directly implicated
in the Nigerian investigation.
She did not name the companies involved in shipments. Past suppliers
have included many large Swiss-based private trading houses. Swiss-based Nimex
Petroleum was suspended earlier this year by Nigeria's fuel regulator for
failing to provide documents for shipments.
Nigeria is Africa's top oil exporter but it imports most of the fuel it
consumes because its refineries are ill-maintained and run at a fraction of
their capacity. The government buys the fuel then sells it to the public at
cheap, subsidised prices.
Private Nigeria-based fuel marketers are thought to have abused the
country's subsidy system by misreporting fuel volumes, for example by reporting
the same cargo more than once in a practice known as
"round-tripping."
Some of this fuel was sourced from tankers chartered by large trading
houses anchored offshore Nigeria.
A source a
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