Home News Crude Oil Diversion: Court Summons Four Officials of UBA, Citi Bank for Flouting its Order

Crude Oil Diversion: Court Summons Four Officials of UBA, Citi Bank for Flouting its Order

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* Refuses to Unfreeze SPDC’s Bank Accounts

A Federal High Court Judge, Justice Oluremi Oguntoyinbo has summoned four officials of United Bank for Africa and Citi Bank for disobeyed the interim ex-parte order of the court, directing the freezing of the accounts of Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria (SPDC) domiciled in the banks.

They judge also on Tuesday refused to discharge the interim order it made, freezing the SPDC’s accounts in 20 banks.

Delivering the ruling on Tuesday, Justice Oguntoyinbo summoned the secretaries and chief financial officers of the two banks who disobeyed the interim ex-parte order to appear before the court on the next adjourned date of March 29, 2021.

The affected banks and their officials are Citi Bank Ltd., its Company Secretary, Sola Fagbure, and Chief Financial Officer, Sharaf Mohammed, as well as United Bank For Africa (UBA) Plc, its Company Secretary, Bill Andrew Odum, and Chief Financial Officer, Ebenezer Kolawole.

The judge warned that their failure to appear would result in a warrant of arrest being issued against them.

According to Channels TV, the judge made these orders while ruling on three applications in a suit filed by AITEO Eastern E&P Company Ltd. against SPDC and four others.

AITEO is claiming about $2.7 billion against SPDC over alleged problems with the Nembe Creek Trunk Line (NCTL) pipeline it bought from the Anglo-Dutch group in 2015, and over claims that Shell undercounted its oil exports.

At AITEO’s instance, Justice Oguntoyinbo granted an interim Mareva injunction on January 25, 2021, directing 20 commercial banks to block SPDC and its subsidiaries’ accounts and to bar Royal Dutch Shell’s Nigerian subsidiaries from withdrawing money at 20 banks until it ‘ringfences’ potential damages in the lawsuit brought against the firm.

The order was sequel to AITEO’s bid to recover from Shell, the cash equivalent of more than 16 million barrels of crude oil allegedly diverted by the oil giant.

Eighteen of the banks were said to have complied with the order, except Citi Bank and UBA.

On the respondents’ application to vacate the Mareva injunction and unfreeze the bank accounts, the judge held that the ex-parte order subsists, pending the determination of AITEO’s motion on notice.

The case has been journed until March 29 for the hearing of the committal proceedings and other applications.

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