After U.S. warning
Nigeria drops charges against Halliburton, Cheney
By
Abayomi Azikiwe
Editor, Pan-African News Wire
Published Dec 23, 2010 11:03 PM
After the George Bush-Dick Cheney ticket stole the 2000 presidential elections,
Halliburton Corporation became a household word in the United States. Vice
President Cheney had been Halliburton’s CEO during 1995-2000. With its
subsidiary, Kellogg, Brown and Root, Halliburton won lucrative government
contracts during the U.S. invasion and occupation of Iraq.
In late November the Nigerian Economic and Financial Crimes Commission raided
KBR-affiliated offices inside the country and arrested 23 Nigerians and
foreigners, charging them with bribery involving $180 million. KBR is no longer
formally associated with Halliburton since 2007. The charges involve alleged
bribes paid by Halliburton/KBR officials to win contracts to develop the Bonny
Island liquefied natural gas project in the resource-rich Niger Delta region of
Nigeria.
Other firms associated with the criminal investigation in Nigeria include
Technip SA, Europe’s second largest oilfield services provider; ENI SpA,
Italy’s biggest oil company; and Saipem Construction Co., a unit of
ENI.
Yet on Dec. 17 the EFCC announced that charges against Dick Cheney and
Halliburton/KBR were being dropped in exchange for the payment of $250 million
in fines to the Nigerian government. The decision prompted much consternation
in Nigeria, Africa’s most populous state, which just recently dropped a
civil lawsuit against Pfizer pharmaceutical company in exchange for the payment
of $75 million to the government.
The EFCC said that it reached the settlement in London at meetings with lawyers
and other officials representing Cheney and Halliburton/KBR. Though KBR had
admitted last year to paying out the bribes to officials during a period
spanning 1994-2004, it has sought to avoid criminal prosecution in the U.S.,
France and Switzerland as well as in Nigeria. In the U.S., KBR has reportedly
paid out a $579 million settlement to avoid convictions and prison time for its
executives. (Al Jazeera, Dec. 17)
Other firms associated with the bribery scandal also paid fines in the U.S.
“Panalpina, Royal Dutch Shell and five oil-services companies agreed to
pay $236.5 million to resolve a U.S. probe of overseas bribery.” (Times
of Nigeria, Dec. 1)
The EFFC is still pursuing criminal complaints against Nigerian nationals and
others associated with the bribery scandal.
Deal follows State Dept. warning
Just one week before the charges were dropped, U.S. assistant secretary of
state for African affairs, Johnnie Carson, said at a press briefing that
Nigeria should “carefully review the 16-count corruption allegations made
against a former U.S. vice-president, Dick Cheney, in the Halliburton
bribe-for-contract scandal.” Carson indicated that the U.S. was speaking
to Nigerian authorities about the case and wanted the case to be reviewed and
the charges to be carefully and deeply substantiated as they were “very
serious.” (Nigeria Tribune, Dec. 11)
The Human Rights Writers’ Association of Nigeria severely criticized the
decision on Halliburton, saying, “President Goodluck Jonathan, through
the office of the federal attorney-general and minister of justice had set a
bad precedent which conveyed the impression that corruption thrived in Nigeria
provided you were clever enough not to be caught or buoyant enough to settle
out of court if eventually caught.” (Nigeria Punch, Dec. 20)
Nigeria has been the focus of a number of recent high profile criminal cases
that have been discharged after multimillion dollar settlements.
The pharmaceutical giant Pfizer was recently allowed to avoid potential
liability in a $6 billion lawsuit involving the use of tainted antibiotics in a
purported “clinical trial” of the drug Trovan, used to treat
meningitis. The lawsuit alleged that the drug caused the deaths of 11 children
and sickened dozens of others. The Nigerian attorney general dropped the claim
after Pfizer exerted pressure and managed to settle for a mere $75
million.
Oil industry key to Nigerian-U.S. relations
Unrest arising from the exploitation and oppression of the people in the Niger
Delta has continued. The U.S. energy firm Chevron announced on Dec. 20 that it
was suspending production from an oil pipeline that was damaged three days
before. Chevron said that it was investigating the sabotage of the Dibi-Abiteye
pipeline, which transports 123,000 barrels of crude oil per day. (Reuters, Dec.
20)
The Niger Delta Liberation Force claimed responsibility for the attack on the
Chevron facility. As a result of the escalation of attacks against oil
facilities in the Niger Delta, crude oil production has declined in recent
years in Nigeria, despite a 2009 amnesty program aimed at ending militant
activity in the region. Prior to 2009, Nigeria was Africa’s largest
exporter of oil into the U.S. Now Angola is. With the failure of the federal
government to curb militant activity against the oil industry, this trend will
likely continue.
Despite the billions of dollars in profits generated annually through the
exploitation of Nigerian oil and natural gas, the overall living conditions of
the workers and farmers have worsened since the advent of the world economic
crisis. A recent column by Moses John published Dec. 20 in the Nigerian
Leadership newspaper reports that though the Nigerian labor movement began its
latest demands for a new national minimum wage two years ago, the results were
small.
John continued: “For this reason, among others, Nigeria is rated among
the poorest nations of the world. This disgraceful condition of widespread
poverty amidst a vast ocean of material prosperity breeds frustration, anger
and hatred from the impoverished sections of the populace.”
These conditions require that the Nigerian people organize on a national level
to take control of their government and the natural resources of the country.
When this occurs the U.S. government and the multinational corporations that
prop it up will inevitably be held accountable for the horrendous crimes
committed in the interests of profit and economic control.
Articles copyright 1995-2012 Workers World.
Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted in any medium without royalty provided this notice is preserved.
Workers World, 55 W. 17 St., NY, NY 10011
Email:
ww@workers.org
Subscribe
wwnews-subscribe@workersworld.net
Support independent news
DONATE