The Herald (South Africa)

HUGE OIL DEAL WAS EXPLORED

- Sabelo Skiti and Graeme Hosken

A COMPANY owned by a former cabinet minister and an intimate business partner of the Guptas investigat­ed a multimilli­on-dollar deal with former Central African Republic (CAR) leader Michel Djotodia’s regime only months after his rebel forces were responsibl­e for the slaughter of 15 South African soldiers.

The soldiers were killed in March 2013 by Seleka rebels who overran the country and ousted former CAR president Francois Bozizi.

But barely four months after the South African troops were slain‚ Gupta associates were involved in talks with the regime of Djotodia‚ who was CAR president from March 2013 to January 2014‚ and the Gupta family were consulted‚ leaked e-mails suggest.

Shortly after Djotodia came to power‚ South African company Gade Oil and Gas‚ at the time owned by Gupta associate Salim Essa and Ben Ngubane‚ a former arts and culture minister‚ submitted to his government an expression of interest to explore an oil block in that country‚ the e-mails suggest. Ngubane is now Eskom board chairman. The negotiatio­n for this block was met with a $50 000 (R656 000) “incentive fee” for a meeting from a middleman in CAR, who claimed to wield influence over CAR’s oil and petroleum minister.

The e-mail was forwarded to prominent businessma­n and former Essa partner Iqabal Sharma by Cape Town businessma­n Luphumzo Kebeni.

Sharma told Times Media when contacted yesterday that Kebeni‚ a former South African government employee‚ claimed to be representi­ng the interests of the CAR government.

He said: “We never spoke to anybody in power directly. We were told we could speak to the ministry.

“I think negotiatio­ns dragged on for few months‚ but nothing happened because we were not willing to pay for a meeting.”

Included in the e-mails seen by Times Media are others which spell out the terms of an offer from one of the companies involved.

This mail ended up in the in-tray of Rajesh “Tony” Gupta on July 30‚ passing through Essa and Sharma.

Sharma said they had come to him and Gupta for help with mining opportunit­ies. “I didn’t know anyone who could do that‚ so I spoke to Tony [Gupta].

“He mentioned that Kebeni has contacts in that place and he had mentioned elsewhere that he worked in the oil and gas business.

He said: “Kebeni claimed that he knew people in the ministry . . . and that he had been tasked by the CAR government to source investment.

“The decision was made that he arrange a meeting with the president through [the middleman]. “But all this never materialis­ed.” Kebeni said he had not met with any Gupta family members or even known of their involvemen­t in the transactio­n involving Gade Oil and Gas. He said he had never met Sharma nor Ngubane. He said he knew the middleman who had helped him “as a long-time friend and comrade” who had helped him establish business networks.

“I never received any bribes nor paid any such emoluments to anyone because none of the transactio­ns we were pursuing yielded anything.”

A statement issued by Ngubane last night said: “The company refused to pay any fees to anyone.

“It also did not enter into any transactio­ns in the CAR and does not own any gas and oil mining rights in the CAR or anywhere else.”

The statement said Ngubane had left the company, which was dormant.

Gupta family attorney Gert van der Merwe said: “The e-mails that you are relying on are (1) unlawfully obtained‚ (2) not authentic‚ and (3) not fully disclosed and therefore not worthy of a comment.”

I never received any bribes nor paid any such emoluments

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