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Italian oil firm allegedly paid $275m in 'bribes' to win $10bn of Algerian deals

The new revelations were uncovered by a team of investigative journalists probing the Panama Papers
Workers outside a desert gas plant in Algeria (AFP)
By AFP

Shell companies created by the law firm behind the Panama Papers played a central role in alleged Italian bribes paid to Algerian officials for energy contracts, an investigative journalism group said on Monday.

In new revelations from the leak of millions of internal records on offshore shell companies, the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists reported that the law firm Mossack Fonseca had created 12 of 17 companies through which the Milan oil services company Saipem SpA allegedly paid $275m to win $10bn in oil and gas deals.

According to ICIJ, a non-profit newsroom, prosecutors in Milan believe the Franco-Algerian businessman Farid Bedjaoui used the offshore entities to funnel the bribes to Algerian officials.

He allegedly used one Mossack Fonseca-created shell company to pass up to $15m to family members of an Algerian energy minister.

Mossack Fonseca, the Panama City firm that specialises in the creation of offshore companies, told ICIJ that its actions were both legal and several steps removed from the actions of its clients or their associates.

Transparency campaigners have long denounced offshore secrecy and banking as an industry which enables corruption and illegal plundering of resources.

Governments have also now joined the campaign against tax havens and offshore companies to fight tax evasion, money laundering and terror finance.

An Italian judge in October ordered Saipem and several officials to stand trial over the company's business in Algeria. The company told ICIJ it was fully cooperating with Italian investigators.

Bedjaoui, 46, lives in Dubai and did not respond to requests for comment from ICIJ, but his lawyers have previously denied wrongdoing, the group said.

Interpol has issued an international alert to law enforcement that Bedjaoui is wanted by Italian police on suspicion of conspiracy to commit corruption.

Saipem has been the focus of international corruption allegations in the past. Snamprogetti Netherlands, a subsidiary of Saipem, agreed to pay $240m to US authorities in 2010 to resolve massive bribery allegations in Nigeria's oil sector.

A court in Algiers in February of this year ordered four companies, including Saipem, to pay fines of between 4m and 5m dinars ($35,500 to $44,300) for corrupt dealings with the state oil company Sonatrach.

The court also handed down sentences ranging from probation to six years in prison to eight people, including former Sonatrach CEO Mohamed Meziane.

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