Nigeria files $1.1bn fraud lawsuit against Shell, Eni over Malabu deal

Shell

The Nigerian government is taking oil giants Shell and Eni to court in London, requesting the return of $1.1 billion as part of a case of alleged corruption dating back to 2011, Bloomberg reported on Thursday.

Nigeria alleges that the money was used by the companies to buy an oil exploration licence in the Gulf of Guinea but was diverted to bribes and kickbacks, the report said.

It claims the money was instead paid to a company controlled by former petroleum minister Dan Etete.

The government alleges that Shell and Eni were partly responsible for the fact that “corrupt Nigerian officials” used the money for personal enrichment, it added.

The alleged corruption is already the subject of a separate court case in Milan in which Nigeria is a civil party.

Shell and Eni have always denied any unlawful action.

In a statement sent to AFP on Thursday, a Shell spokesman said that the deal in 2011 was “a fully legal transaction with Eni and the Federal Government of Nigeria”.

“Since this matter is before the Tribunal of Milan, it would not be appropriate for us to comment in detail on the new claims that have been made,” it said.

A Milan judge in September sentenced two people considered intermediaries to four years in prison each.

The two were tried separately from the main trial involving Eni and Shell which opened earlier this year in Milan.