Documents obtained by
PREMIUM TIMES from the leaked database of now infamous Panamanian law firm,
Mossack Fonseca, revealed that Mr Umaru incorporated two shell companies in the
British Virgin Islands (BVI), a notorious offshore tax haven, and in tiny South
Pacific Ocean country, Niue Island.
In his native Niger State,
David Umaru, the All Progressives Congress senator representing Niger East
Senatorial District is something of a folk hero.
He was a thorn under the
skin of the immediate past administration of Governor Mu’azu BabangidaAliyu. He
was an unwavering critic and soon gained the reputation of a whistleblower
after be published series of advertorials in national newspapers exposing
alleged corrupt practices by the Mr Mu’azu’s administration.
But one aspect of his life
Mr Umaru would hesitate to see on the pages of newspapers is his dealings in
notorious offshore tax havens and his role in laundering money for the
country’s most notorious dictator ever, Sani Abacha.
The first company,
Yorkshire Investment Limited was incorporated on April 27, 1998 with a
registered address at No2 Commercial Centre Square, Alofi, the capital of the
Niue Island.
The company was
incorporated by International Trust Company (ITC), a Niue-based registering
agent. In other to conceal the true ownership of the shell company, ITC
provided two nominee directors for the company – Melvin Scales (Chairman) and
Ramses Owens.
But Mr Umaru was clearly
named the true and lawful attorney of the company.
The appointment of nominee
directors for shell companies is a common practice in tax havens. The practice
involved the appointment of directors only by title. They have no real
authority over the company which they supposedly represent and can only act
according to the directives of the owners of the firm or that of the person
with a power of attorney.
“Know all men by these
presents that on this 27th day of April, 1998, we, YORKSHIRE INVESTMENT LTD,
whose registered office is situated at 2 Commercial Centre Square, Alofi, Niue
(hereinafter referred to as “the Company “) have made, constituted and
appointed, and by these presents do hereby make, constitute and appoint Mr.
David UMARU (hereinafter referred to as “the Attorney”) as our true and lawful
Attorney—in—fact for us and in our name, place and stead, to do, execute and
perform all and every act or acts in law needful and necessary to be done in
and about and in relation, but not limited to, the following matters:
“To negotiate, conclude,
sign, execute and deliver on behalf of the Company such conveyances, transfers,
assignments, deeds, documents, licenses, authorities or agreements as said
Attorney shall consider necessary or proper to enable it to dispose of or
acquire any assets in any part of the world (hereinafter referred to as “the
assets”) on such terms as the Attorney shall consider proper or desirable in
his absolute discretion,” the company’s article of incorporation read.
Not satisfied by the
incorporation of his first shell company, five months later, exactly on
September 15, 1998, Mr. Umaru again went shopping for his second shell company
– Darweng Holding.
This time he decided to
incorporate it in the British Virgin Islands. Just like he did with Yorkshire
Investment Ltd, Mr Umaru appointed Benerly Hunt and Darlene Bayne as the
company’s nominee directors while he retained a full power of attorney, which
gave him absolute power to “negotiate, conclude, sign, execute and. deliver on
behalf of the Company such conveyances, transfers, assignments, deeds,
documents, licenses, authorities or agreements as said Attorney shall consider
necessary or proper to enable it to dispose of or acquire any assets in any
part of the world (hereinafter referred to as ‘the assets’).”
There is no evidence that
Mr Umaru was no longer involved with the shell companies before he was elected
a senator.
While not all owners or
operators of such offshore entities are criminals, owning or maintaining
interest in private companies while serving as public officials is against
Nigerian laws.
Section 6(b) of the Code of
Conduct Act says a public office holder shall not, “except where he is not
employed on full‐time
basis, engage or participate in the management or running of any private
business, profession or trade.”
This revelation makes Mr
Umaru the fourth serving Nigerian senator, after Senate President Bukola
Saraki, his predecessor, David Mark, and Senator Andy Uba, who have been shown
to own shell companies in offshore tax havens in clear violation of the country’s
law.
Abacha’s bagman
It is unclear what
businesses Mr. Umaru transacted with his offshore companies.
But at about the same time
he ran the companies, Mr. Umaru, who is currently the Chairman of the Senate
Committee on Human Rights and Legal Matters, helped the Abacha family to move
huge funds around.
An affidavit filed in
November 18, 2013 by the US Department of Justice in a suit seeking the
forfeiture of assets worth over $500 million stolen by Mr Abacha and hidden in
various in bank accounts in various offshore jurisdiction, revealed how Mr
Umaru acted as the official extortionist and money launderer of the Abachas.
In 2003, as part of a ploy
to extort money from foreign companies, the Abacha regime stopped paying
foreign companies for contracts executed. One of sure companies was a French
Civil Engineering firm, Dumez Group. The Abacha regime owed the company $469
million it refused to pay. In fact, even after the company nationalized and
became Dumez Nigeria Limited, the junta still would not release the funds.
Enter Mr. Umaru. The
senator, who was then a personal lawyer for the Abachas, approached the owners
of Dumez and told them payment could be restarted if they agreed to a 25 per
cent kickback of whatever they were paid to the Abacha family. The company
agreed.
Mr Umaru then incorporated
Allied Network Ltd for the sole purpose of collecting the kickbacks on behalf
of the Abacha family. Listed as directors of the company were “Mohammed Sani”
and “Abba Sani”, which were aliases of Sani Abacha and his brother, Abba
Abacha.
In December 1996, Mr. Umaru
opened an account on behalf of Allied Network Ltd at the Union Bancaire Privee
(UBP) in Geneva, Switzerland, which was used to receive the payment of the
kickbacks from Dumez and another account at the same bank which was used to
receive the payment from the Nigerian government.
According to court papers,
between August 16, 1996 and May 22, 1998, the Central Bank of Nigeria
transferred $389,737,400 to Dumez account at UBP, Geneva. Of that amount
$97,375,543 or 25 per cent of the original payment was transferred by Dumez to
Allied Network Ltd account in the same bank.
In late 1997, Mohammed
Abacha, the son of the late dictator, authorised the transfer of $11,114,983,
being part of the kickback received from Dumez, to an account held by “Mohammed
Sani” (Mohammed Sani is the preferred alias of the younger Mr Abacha). He used
the alias repeatedly in most of the money laundering transactions involving his
family, including the infamous Malabu Oil deal) at Midland Bank London (Now
HSBC Bank Plc) with account number 38175076.
The money was later
distributed into two accounts also held by Mohammed Sani in the US via a
network of several financial institutions.
Mr Umaru did not answer
repeated calls to his mobile number by this newspaper. He also did not reply
text message sent to his phone for comment.
Premium Times
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ReplyDeleteUmaru is an International thief exposing others. O TO JIGIRI NINU KIKO OWO NIGERIA PELU ABACHA.
ReplyDeletethe older thieves are linked to the new ones
ReplyDelete