Scientology
The Nigeria Guardian
The deals, similar to the Ajaokuta debt buy-back scheme of the late Gen.
Sani Abacha administration were blown open recently by former football
star, John Fashanu.
At a forum held by the U.S.-based Nigerian Democratic Movement (NDM), at
Havard University, Washington DC, Minton also conceded that if the deals
were done in the open market, they would have fetched higher prices for
Nigeria.
The American businessman, with two others - Jeff Schmidt and Celine
Louis - bought back debts and resold to Nigeria between 1988 and 1993.
Minton, who expressed readiness to testify before the Nigerian Senate,
if summoned, noted that by the disclosures, he was violating the term of
agreement with the Babangida administration that the transaction would
be kept secret.
Fashanu and his Canada-based investigator, Robert Clarke, who were also
billed to address the forum were, however absent.
Minton, a stocky caucasian who came to the venue with packets of files
and his personal staff, said he had nothing to hide and refuted reports
that his accounts were frozen as alleged by the Fashanu report.
He called for an independent auditing of the transactions. But the
audience queried him on the propriety of the deals, especially as it was
done in secret, or if such was in line with market standard and fair
public bidding process. Minton said it was the decision of the Nigerian
government to enter into the deal and not his.
He, however, said he would not got into such a deal again because he was
now concerned in his life with other things apart from money-making.
According to him, what he and his two other partners did, for which they
made $45 million in five years, was to buy back debts some of which were
already being sold at secondary markets. They then resold to Nigeria, in
that way reducing the debt load of Nigeria at that time. Minton said in
his opening remarks that some of the debts were being written off
already by the creditors before the buy-back scheme began, adding that
if Nigeria had continued to ignore the debts, she would have had
difficulty in securing credits and faced possible seizure of her
property abroad.
In all, Minton said they bought three levels of Nigerian debts between
1988 and 1993. These were $1.1 billion in CBN promisory notes, $3
billion in Federal Government public debts and $564 million in
multilateral debts. Asked if he knew these debts to be genuine, Minton
said the debts were simply designated as general purpose loans, adding
that he knew that some of CBN's promissory notes were litigated upon and
cancelled, but that those they bought were valid.
Minton added that he and his partners under the business name of
Greenland Holdings held a total of $2.8 billion Nigerian money, a
break-down of which is; reserves - $1.1, buy-back proceeds $1.2 billion,
$60 million from NNPC and $464 million in interests that Nigeria was
paying while they bought the debts.
On the expenditure side, Minton disclosed that they spent $1.5 billion
on the debt purchase and another $1.2 billion on buy-back proceeds to
the CBN. Buy-back interests to CBN was also put at $3.5 million. Other
expenditures were $4.5 million bank debt holding fees, $3.7 million bank
debt exit fees, $14 million in payments to the NNPC, $60 million in
promissory notes repurchase from NNPC, $138,688 in interest paid to NNPC
and $658,278 transfer to Federal Government of Nigeria.
In trying to defend his involvement in the deal, Minton said he did not
do anything criminal as Nigerian lawyers in New York had already given
clearance for the buy-back. But he said the deal was indeed not in the
spirit of the loan agreements that Nigeria entered into with the
creditor banks.
As to the steps he would take on the accusations levelled against him by
the Fashanu report, Minton said he had retained a counsel in Nigeria,
sued Fashanu in Italy and would also sue him in Germany and the United
Kingdom.
Minton alleged that Fashanu was being used by the Church of Scientology
with which he has a three-year running battle over the church's alleged
human rights violations and murder of certain persons which he is trying
to expose.
Members of the audience, some of whom were international economists and
scholars, told Minton that such lending practices that was used to do
the deal had in fact been condemned by the Bretton Woods institutions.
Those present at the forum included Mr. George Noah, a London-based
journalist who has been involved in widely reporting the Fashanu report,
Mrs. Chris Anyanwu, Mr. Ademola Oyinlola of Tell magazine. The group
also honoured Anyanwu with a presentation of the NDM's first June 12
award for her "grace and courage in defence against tyranny".
http://www.ngrguardiannews.com/news2/nn788504.html
Babangida's N450b debt buy-back deals, by partner
14.6.2000
By Laolu Akande (Washington DC)
DETAILS of the N450 billion ($4.5 billion) debt buy-back deals of the
Gen. Ibrahim Babangida administration were unearthed at the weekend in
Washington DC, United States of America, with the then government's
principal partner, Bob Minton admitting that the transactions were not
totally transparent.