|
|
|
Fighting fraud charges in India, Sandesara brothers flourish in Nigeria
|
|
|
|
Top Stories |
 |
|
|
|
IANS | 06 Jun, 2023
The selection of a firm owned by the family of the Sandesara brothers
branded as fugitives by India to drill wells for the project is just the
latest sign of how Nigeria has provided the brothers a haven,
effectively insulating them from troubles back home, a media report
said.
Now, as newly elected President Bola Tinubu sets
ambitious targets for Nigeria's hydrocarbons sector, companies created
by the brothers, Nitin and Chetan Sandesara, seem poised for an
increasingly prominent role -- especially as international oil giants
such Shell Plc and ExxonMobil Corp. retreat from the West African
country, said the Bloomberg report.
"This discovery will provide
a multiplicity of opportunity and great prosperity for Nigeria," Tinubu
said at a November 2022 event.
Sworn in on May 29, he was the ruling party's presidential candidate at the time.
The
state's partners in the multi-billion dollar project in the
impoverished, landlocked corner of the country is a company founded by
two brothers from India.
The siblings have built the largest
independent oil company in Africa's biggest crude producing nation even
as India pursues them as criminals -- accusing them of perpetrating "one
of the largest economic scams in the country", Bloomberg reported.
The
Sandesara brothers, Gujarati businessmen who left India in 2017, deny
cheating their lenders and say they are victims of political
persecution.
Having ventured into the Nigerian oil industry
almost 20 years ago when they won two onshore licenses in the delta, the
brothers -- faced with problems in India -- have shifted their focus to
Lagos. They even applied for Nigerian citizenship, according to the
Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI), Bloomberg reported.
While
the brothers fight fraud charges and non-bailable warrants from India,
the Sandesara businesses are flourishing in Nigeria.
The African
nation refused to arrest them four years ago saying the Indian
allegations "appeared to be political in nature, according to a letter
published by the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project,
Bloomberg reported.
From a sanctuary on Lagos's upscale Victoria
Island, one of their Nigerian companies has continued that glitzy
tradition, sponsoring annual Diwali celebrations that are the talk of
the city's small Indian community, even flying in Bollywood singers like
Shreya Ghoshal to perform.
The family's Nigerian oil and gas business -- with the slogan "Success is Natural" -- is thriving.
The
group's subsidiaries -- Sterling Oil Exploration & Production Co.
and Sterling Global Oil Resources Ltd. -- pump about 50,000 barrels of
crude a day in the delta via contracts with the state-owned Nigerian
National Petroleum Co.
Another unit expects to bring a third
block into production this year that will eventually raise total daily
output to above 100,000 barrels, Bloomberg reported.
Other than
the international majors such as Shell and Chevron Corp., the Sandesara
family is the top exporter of oil from Nigeria.
Its firms' taxes contributed 2 per cent of the Nigerian government's revenue, Nitin said in 2019.
An
export system of transporting crude on barges to a floating storage
vessel in the Atlantic Ocean -- rather than relying on pipelines that
are vulnerable to thieves -- has enabled the family's companies to
maintain a consistent performance as other producers have floundered.
Indian authorities take a less rosy view of the Sandesaras's practices.
Beginning
in the 1980s, the brothers transformed a family tea-trading business
into a Mumbai-headquartered conglomerate spanning oil and gas, health
care, construction and engineering and owning one of the world's largest
manufacturers of pharmaceutical grade gelatin, Bloomberg reported.
By
the early 2010s, the group said it was valued at almost $7 billion.
Some of that expansion was bankrolled by a "well calculated economic
fraud" that left the group owing more than $1.71 billion to public
lenders including State Bank of India, Bank of Baroda and Union Bank of
India, the CBI told the Supreme Court a year ago.
Among
accusations leveled against them include the use of "false and
fabricated documents" to secure bank loans and the diversion of funds
overseas.
The same lenders also provided credit lines to the
entity that owned the Nigerian oil business, the CBI said in a December
2019 charge sheet, Bloomberg reported.
State-backed lenders,
including Bank of India, won two judgments from UK courts -- in 2018 and
2021 -- ordering Sandesara companies providing services to Sterling Oil
to pay almost $60 million after they defaulted on loans.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Customs Exchange Rates |
Currency |
Import |
Export |
US Dollar
|
84.35
|
82.60 |
UK Pound
|
106.35
|
102.90 |
Euro
|
92.50
|
89.35 |
Japanese
Yen |
55.05 |
53.40 |
As on 12 Oct, 2024 |
|
|
Daily Poll |
 |
 |
Do you think Indian businesses will be negatively affected by Trump's America First Policy? |
|
|
|
|
|
Commented Stories |
 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|