A UK court will hear arguments from a few managers and staff members over their possible involvement in bribery offences connected to Swiss commodities trader, Glencore, according to the head of Cameroon’s National Hydrocarbons Corporation (SNH).
The administrator and director general of SNH, Adolphe Moudiki, had previously denied staff involvement. However, late on Friday, he released a statement stating that some workers had been identified as suspects and would appear in court in the United Kingdom on September 10.
In June 2022, the UK subsidiary of Glencore entered a guilty plea to seven counts of bribery related to oil operations in Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea, Nigeria, South Sudan, and the Ivory Coast in a London court.
The Serious Fraud Office (SFO) of Britain accused Alex Beard, the former head of Glencore’s oil division, on Thursday of two schemes to pay corruptly to government officials and staff members of state-owned oil businesses in Cameroon and Nigeria.
“SNH welcomes the progress of proceedings against the perpetrators and accomplices of the acts of corruption that have tarnished its image,” Moudiki said in the statement.
To obtain preferential access to oil between 2011 and 2016, Glencore’s UK company has acknowledged that it paid bribes of 7 billion CFA francs ($11 million) to SNH officials and other parties in Cameroon.
In addition to dealing with starvation, the Zamzam displacement camp in north Darfur, Sudan, is also at risk of water contamination from flooding.
Akere Muna, a lawyer and anti-corruption expert from Cameroon, suggested that SNH stop doing business with Glencore and reveal the identity of the people engaged.
“The culprits are within Cameroon, the transactions that gave rise to the corruption took place in Cameroon yet they expect us to believe the solution will come from London,” said Muna, a former vice-chairperson of corruption watchdog Transparency International.
The State Anti-corruption Commission of Cameroon said in July 2022 that it was conducting an inquiry into bribery offences, but it has not provided any additional information since.
The state-owned corporation SNH sells on the foreign market the portion of the country’s crude oil production that accrues to the state.