THISDAY

$1.1bn Malabu Oil Deal: Investigat­ions are Ongoing, Says AGF

Blames complexiti­es for delay

- Damilola Oyedele in Abuja

The Attorney General of the Federation, Mr. Abubakar Malami, has said investigat­ions are still ongoing into the controvers­ial $1.1 billion award of Oil Prospectin­g Licence 245, also know as the Malabu oil deal, with no conclusive position by the federal government.

Malami said this yesterday when he appeared before the House of Representa­tives ad hoc committee mandated to re-open investigat­ions into the sale of the controvers­ial oil block, where he added that the government would not take a position until all complexiti­es in the deal are resolved.

The complexiti­es, he stated, are borne from the several national and internatio­nal litigation­s among the parties to the OPL 245.

The federal government, Agip, Shell, Malabu Oil and Gas, and several individual­s had entered litigation and agreements, at different times, Malami told the committee chaired by Hon. Razak Atunwa (Kwara APC).

Within Malabu Oil itself, there were different interests which made it hard to determine which parties signed which agreements, he added.

“We have multiple contention­s. There is Mohammed Abacha, we have Dan Etete, Atiku Abubakar, Hassan Adamu; they are all laying claims to entities,” Malami noted and added that the complex history of the oil well itself, has led to the revocation and re-award of its licence several times.

“So, whatever I am providing to this committee is provisiona­l. The investigat­ion is ongoing and it is not conclusive. There are many areas to look at. We will take a comprehens­ive position and revert to the committee as soon as possible,” the AGF said.

At the hearing which was attended by the Abacha and Oyewole Fasawe, who are shareholde­rs in Malabu Oil, the AGF noted that some available informatio­n have already shown that there were irregulari­ties.

The committee chairman, Atunwa noted that the ‘lucrative’ OPL 245 occupies an area of 1,958 square kilometres and holds up to 9.2 billion barrels of crude oil.

“This is a highly controvers­ial allocation of perhaps the biggest oil bloc in Africa. There is a lot at stake on this issue and the credibilit­y and revenue for this country is at stake. However complex the situation may be, the law is able to deal with it. The House is also able to make enquiries and make recommenda­tion on the matter,” he said.

Atunwa added that the hearing, even though not a substantiv­e one, is intended to identify culpable persons in the matter of the OPL 245, and to unveil the processes that led to the award.

“The powers of the former minister to award the oil bloc in not unfettered. The House has the power to examine,” he said.

The committees members who had frowned at the absence of representa­tives of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC), insisted they must appear.

The hearing was adjourned to October 18, 2016.

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