Nigerian anti-graft office charges former oil official over failed gas deal

Published 20/09/2019, 16:28
© Reuters.  Nigerian anti-graft office charges former oil official over failed gas deal

By Camillus Eboh

ABUJA, Sept 20 (Reuters) - Nigeria's anti-fraud office on

Friday charged a former petroleum ministry official with

accepting bribes and failing to follow protocol over an

ill-fated gas deal that has left the government facing a

disputed bill of more than $9 billion.

Grace Taiga, former petroleum ministry director of legal,

pleaded not guilty in a court in the capital of Abuja to eight

counts of wrongdoing put forward by the Economic and Financial

Crimes Commission (EFCC).

In court documents, the EFCC also alleged the now-deceased

former petroleum minister and OPEC official Rilwanu Lukman broke

the law by signing the deal without proper approvals and

protocol.

The charges relate to a 2010 contract with British Virgin

Islands-based firm Process and Industrial Developments (P&ID) to

build and operate a gas-processing plant in the southeastern

port city of Calabar.

P&ID took the government to international arbitration after

the deal's collapse, eventually winning a $6.6 billion award. It

has been accruing interest since 2013 and is now worth more than

$9 billion. The government has said the deal was designed to fail, and

called the award "an assault on every Nigerian and unfair." P&ID

said the EFCC had harrassed, intimidated and denied due process

to individuals associated with the company and the contract.

The EFCC alleges Taiga accepted bribes, made false

statements and signed the contract without approval from the

federal executive council and Bureau of Public Procurement.

It said she received $1,000 in 2015 and payments of $10,000

in each of December 2017 and June 2018 as a reward for favours

to P&ID.

The judge remanded Taiga in prison until her application for

bail is determined on Sept. 25.

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