Scientology
Tomorrow, April 2, 2000, The Sunday Times of London will have a
detailed story on this whole Nigerian affair and a second
follow-up is to be printed on Monday, April 3rd in The Times,
both by Nick Fielding. Should make for interesting reading.
You will notice that Scientology is mentioned in the Africa
Confidential article. There are two very interesting items
concerning Scientology and Nigeria that are not mentioned that
are subject to further investigation:
1) The Secretary-General of OPEC, Rilwanu Lukman, a Nigerian
Moslem AND a confirmed practicing Scientologists for about 2
years, was the conduit through which Scientology had access to
Senior Nigerian Government officials in their attempt to
destroy my former partner Jeff Schmidt in order to have me stop
my attempts to tell the truth about Scientology. Lukman, a
former Oil Minister in Nigeria and 2 term President of OPEC is
the most influential Nigerian in the world. (See REPOST re Jeff
Schmidt)
2) John Fashanu, mentioned below, has confirmed spending over
US$ 1.0 million investigating the debt buy-back activities of
Nigeria. Did he buy this information from the trio of
Scientology detectives: Peter Franks, David Lee (Lebow) and
Eugene Ingram? Is Fashanu being used to divert attention from
the role that Scientology and Lukman are playing?
Time will tell.
Bob Minton
NIGERIA: Offshore, offside
The determination of President Olusegun Obasanjo's government
to probe the financial management of its military predecessors
is to be tested by soccer star John Fashanu. He has launched a
private investigation into a US$6 billion Nigerian debt
buy-back scheme, claiming it was 'riddled with corruption'.
The scheme was run from the Central Bank of Nigeria between
1988 and 1993, while General Ibrahim Babangida was President.
On the face of it the scheme was a shrewd way of covertly
buying back Nigeria's commercial debt at deep discounts.
Babangida had pledged to reduce the debt substantially and did
so. In 1992, Nigeria had agreed the terms for a 'Brady bond'
deal - basically, an approved way of reducing the nominal value
of debts that were never likely to be paid in full - which took
some $5.5bn. of commercial debt off the books. Fashanu, who is
also the United Nations' Children's Fund special envoy in
London, was found innocent in 1998, along with Zimbabwean
goalkeeper Bruce Grobelaar, of charges that they fixed British
soccer league matches. Fashanu told Africa Confidential that
his investigators (whose report was sent this week to senior
Nigerian officials) had established that the scheme was a
smokescreen behind which hundreds of millions of dollars were
diverted into Swiss and Austrian accounts. He claims that
'faceless men' had been trying to stop his anti-corruption
investigations.
Blowing the Gulf windfall A report on the CBN's operations by
Nigerian economist Pius Okigbo, submitted to the government in
1995, alleged that some $12.4 bn. of government payments
through CBN in 1988-93 weren't audited or adequately accounted
for. The sum was part of the windfall from higher oil prices
following the 1990-91 Gulf War. Some $4.4 bn. had been
earmarked for currency stabilisation and debt buy-backs but
according to its operators, the 1988-93 scheme cost only $2.5
bn. and there are no records of other buy-back or currency
stabilisation operations in that period.
Attempts to investigate and recover any funds misappropriated
from the 1988-93 buy-back would be delicate, involving detailed
enquiries into big transactions under Babangida. Answering
demands that Babangida should be personally probed by the
government, Obasanjo says he has yet to see any conclusive
evidence implicating his predecessor in fraud. The President
needs to keep Babangida on side; he is still influential at
home and abroad and, as a northern Muslim who still holds court
in his mansion in Minna, has kept studiously silent about the
Sharia (Islamic law) controversy (AC Vol 41 No 5).
The $6 bn. buy-back operation was secret because Nigeria was
breaking the rule that all types of debt must be treated
equally. The scheme's kingpin, Abdulkadir Ahmed, Governor of
the CBN, died of a brain tumour in the mid 1990s. The
buy-back's complex structure involved a chain of front
companies and offshore companies set up but not controlled by
the government. The scheme was engineered by two American
bankers, Jeffrey Schmidt and Robert Minton. Schmidt had worked
for Shearson Lehman and got to know Babangida and Ahmed when he
worked on a Nigerian-Romanian debt swap deal. He became
particularly close to Babangida and converted to Islam; some
regarded him as an unofficial presidential financial advisor.
Schmidt and Minton initially used a London-based company,
Growth Management Limited (GML) to buy back Nigerian debt on
the secondary market. The Nigerian government would pay funds
into the Österreichische Landesbank, which would pass on the
credits to GML. They worked closely with traders of 'exotic
debt', such as Bob Smith of Turan Corporation in Boston, USA,
an old partner of Minton's from a project in Turkey.
The Nigerian authorities feared that the close links with the
London offices of the Österreichische Landesbank might help
creditors uncover the secret buy-back deal and insisted that
the companies running the buy-back be based in the USA. There,
Minton and Schmidt established one company to buy the debt
(Shamrock Financial) and another to warehouse it on Nigeria's
behalf (Triolet). To finance the buy-back, funds would be sent
from either the CBN or the Nigerian National Petroleum
Corporation to three banks: the Federal Reserve Bank of New
York, Morgan Guaranty in New York or the Bank of International
Settlements in Basle, Switzerland. In turn, they would route
the funds through an offshore company, Greenland Holdings,
incorporated in Panama.
Creditor banks at the time suspected Nigeria was buying back
its own debt but did not know how. A member of the steering
committee of Nigeria's creditors said: 'Some of us were happy
to get rid of our Nigerian liabilities, partly because we were
unsure about Nigeria's political future and partly because the
Bank of England's new provisioning rules made it more expensive
to hang on to it.' So fraught were Nigeria's debt-rescheduling
negotiations at the time - involving tortuous dealings with the
International Monetary Fund and the World Bank - that many
commercial creditors didn't want to muddy the waters by
demanding an investigation.
Minton, then Chairman of Shamrock Financial, says many of the
banks were aware of the buy-back in 'general terms' and took
full advantage of it. For example, Britain's Barclays Bank sold
some $300 mn. of Nigerian debt to the Österreichische
Landesbank in late 1991. Minton strenuously denies there was
any financial wrongdoing or that any funds were secretly
channelled to Swiss or Austrian accounts. He said the late CBN
Governor, Ahmed, was 'transparently honest' and there was
almost no possibility of fraud. 'We kept the Nigerian
authorities fully informed, with detailed reports submitted on
a monthly basis accounting for all the funds received and
disbursed... these reports are still with the Central Bank
today, I believe.' He added that he and his partner, Schmidt,
had notified the IMF and World Bank about the debt buy-back
scheme and that they had given it tacit approval. 'It was a
good deal for Nigeria... they bought their debt back at a heavy
discount and avoided paying millions of dollars in interest.'
The only foul play arose, Minton said, when security men
abducted Schmidt from his Lagos hotel at midnight and accused
him of funnelling all the country's foreign exchange abroad.
They then demanded a cut and Schmidt told them to contact
Governor Ahmed. Minton denies he and Schmidt made
super-profits out of the buy-back. 'We did well, we made tens
of millions of dollars... not hundreds of millions and
certainly not billions.' Other bankers less closely involved
insisted the scheme was legitimate. Stefan Pinter, Managing
Director of GML, said: 'It was one of the most effective
buy-backs I've seen and of great benefit to Nigeria'.
Minton says the investigations into the buy-back are being used
as an opportunity by the Church of Scientology to discredit
him. He says he has spent some $4 mn. in the last five years
defending the right of former scientologists to criticise the
church and has been the target of a campaign of abuse. 'No one
from the US or the Nigerian authorities has raised questions
with me about the probity of the buy-back deal since it wound
up in 1993,' Minton said.
If Nigeria acts on the Fashanu investigation, it will be the
second Nigerian debt buy-back to come under public scrutiny by
the Obasanjo government. The first was a $1.5 bn. deal in 1995
to buy back part of Nigeria's debt to Russia for the still
non-functioning Ajaokuta steel mill (AC Vol 41 No 3).
Negotiations between Obasanjo's National Security Advisor,
Aliyu Mohammed Gusau, and Gen. Sani Abacha's son Mohammed and
business ally Atiku Abubacar Bagudu, broke down late last year
over how much of the profit should be returned to the
government, which is now suing them in London for reneging on
an out-of-court settlement. Last August, the Swiss government
froze accounts containing some $700 mn. held in the name of the
Abacha family.
From: Bob Minton <bob@minton.org>
Date: Sat, 01 Apr 2000 18:56:07 -0500
Organization: The Lisa McPherson Trust, 33 N. Fort Harrison Ave., Clearwater, Florida 33755 Telephone (727) 467-9335, Fax (727) 467-9345
Message-ID: <233des0eho133hsbjuc8ppme012de54ij8@4ax.com>
by Patrick Smith
Africa Confidential, London, Volume 47 Number 1
March 31, 2000
In a private investigation, a soccer star says he's uncovered a
multi-billion dollar debt trading fraud and calls on the
government to act.