Masiyiwa in his post said Lagos and Delta state governments were co-investors when he brought the company into Nigeria. He said after he and other investors succeeded in bringing in the company into Nigeria, he was asked to pay a bribe totaling $9 million to top politicians. He also accused top politicians from Kenya, Zimbabwe, Liberia of being extremely corrupt and also demanding for bribe. He made so many accusations, your head will literally spin. Read his expository post after the cut..
Part 1
I
 had the privilege of making Nigeria’s first GSM phone call back in 2001
 when I called the regulator to say, “We’re live!” Who would’ve believed
 then that Nigeria today would have more than 167 million mobile 
phones?!
It
 all started out as a very exciting new chapter for enterprise in 
Africa. Shortly after President Obasanjo was elected, the new government
 announced an incredibly transparent international auction process for 
three national mobile phone licenses.
To
 participate in the bid, you not only had to raise money, but there had 
to be a member of the bidding consortium who was an experienced GSM 
operator. Econet Wireless met the requirements because of its experience
 in Zimbabwe and Botswana. Our Nigerian partners, which included state 
governments, local banks and high net worth individuals, were financial 
investors. The largest shareholder had only 10%. That was the written 
agreement.
I
 managed to assemble a consortium of 22 investors to put up the money 
needed to bid. Our shareholders were all Nigerian, mostly institutional 
investors including leading banks and two state governments, Lagos State
 and Delta State. The license cost us $285m and was the most expensive 
license ever issued in Africa at the time. This was 2001.
We
 considered the investment not only about putting together a network, 
but also about building a nation. We knew it had the potential to 
transform Nigeria’s entire business and social architecture.
Most
 of our investors had between 1-10% shareholding. Econet Wireless 
Nigeria had only 5% of the shares, but that was fine because it was 5% 
ownership of a very big pie.
As
 the "technical partner and operator," Econet was the company with the 
expertise to build and operate such a business. Our financial investors 
recognised this, and also allowed us to receive 3% of the turnover as 
our fees. This was standard practice in the industry.
We
 were one of the winning bidders and they gave us just six months to set
 up business and get our network operating. We were under a lot of 
pressure but our network was live two days before the others! Customers 
were pouring in. We were number one in the market with an estimated 57% 
market share.
___Then
 came the fateful day when I was told that our company must pay a total 
of $9m in bribes to senior politicians (in state government) who had 
facilitated the raising of the money to pay for the license.
I
 refused to authorise the illegal payments. Meeting after meeting was 
held to try to get me to agree, but I would not. The money would not be 
paid as long as Econet was the operator and I had signing authority.
James
 Ibori, the Governor of Delta State, was demanding $4,5m be paid to him 
in his personal capacity. He was one of the most powerful men in the 
country and had a reputation for violence. When he heard that I was 
refusing to approve payment he issued an ultimatum:
___"Pay or I will chase you and your people out of the country."
I refused.
The
 shareholders met and voted Econet Wireless Nigeria out of management. 
They cancelled our management contract. James Ibori and his colleagues 
personally attended the meeting to remove us. After the meeting one of 
them (a prominent local businessman even today) came up to me and said: 
"Unfortunately for you, God does not have a vote."
I had to withdraw all my staff and their families: 200 people in all. We left Nigeria.
Most of our people had to be retrenched. The loss of the contract almost drove us to bankruptcy as a group.
They
 invited a big international operator to replace us as technical partner
 and operator. They changed the name of the company from Econet to 
V-Mobile.
Within days of their arrival, the managers of the new operator signed off the payments demanded as bribes.
Then what happened?
A
 few noble Nigerians had both the integrity and courage to carefully 
collect all the documentation on the movement of the money, and pass it 
all on to me.
___There’s a saying worth remembering in uncovering the trail of destruction that is corruption: “Follow the money”…
I bided my time... then I wrote a letter to the United States Department of Justice!
It was 2003.
Part 2
Nigeria
 has an agency known as the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission 
(EFCC). After we had to leave the country, a few noble people at the 
company tipped off not only me but the EFCC about the payment of the 
bribes, which had by this time risen from $9m to $13,5m.
I
 had never actually heard about this agency myself until I got a call 
from the Nigerian Embassy in South Africa to say they wanted to come and
 see me to interview me as a witness.
A
 team of very senior EFCC officers came to see us in South Africa. They 
were solid and professional in their enquiry. It was clear they wanted 
to do something about it.
However,
 when these officers returned home to Nigeria, they got into very 
serious trouble. Their investigations into the irregular payments had 
been brought to the attention of James Ibori (Governor of Delta State)…
Soon
 thereafter, the most senior officer leading the investigation was 
demoted and sent to a remote part of the country as an ordinary 
policeman!
Agencies
 like EFCC in Nigeria sometimes have brave and gallant law enforcement 
officers. Unfortunately, as I observed, they’re often let down by their 
political bosses, and sometimes even by the courts. This can change if 
activism from the citizenry emerges to support their work.
___We
 should not only support official efforts to stop corruption but also 
help these agencies and organisations in their investigations. If you 
have relevant information about illegal activities, passing it on could 
make all the difference between impunity and imprisonment.
In
 my letter to the US Justice Department, I detailed the full history of 
the demands for a bribe. I had dates, times, records. I then reminded 
them that since the big international operator had a listing on the New 
York Stock Exchange, they were duty-bound to launch an enquiry. Why did I
 go to them?
The
 United States government has a law called the Foreign Corrupt Practices
 Act. The United Kingdom has a similar one called the British 
Anti-Bribery Act. Whatever you do, make sure you never fall foul of 
those laws because, if they ever use them to come after you, you’re a 
"gonner" my friends.
A
 few weeks later, US officials wrote back advising me that an enquiry 
had been launched. They contacted the big international company seeking 
answers to my allegations. My contacts at the company called to tell me,
 "All hell has broken loose at the company."
The
 parent company of the South African-based multinational sent external 
auditors and lawyers from London to Nigeria. They immediately dismissed 
all the senior executives sent to Nigeria to run the company, and they 
left in a hurry!
Although
 they fled the scene of the crime and returned to their country -- after
 admitting even to both the US Justice Department and the EFCC that the 
money had been paid out – the stolen funds were never returned to the 
Nigerian people, even to this day.
Meanwhile,
 the departure of the other mobile operator did not mean we could return
 to Nigeria. The shareholders found another operator, this time from the
 Middle East.
They
 sold this new operator the control of the company even though Econet 
Wireless Nigeria had the "right of first refusal" over any sale. They 
simply ignored that provision in our agreement. This was illegal, both 
according to our shareholders agreement and Nigerian Company Law. It was
 left for us to take up the fight in another forum, the Nigerian courts.
The
 state government of Akwa Ibom held 15% of the equity in Econet Wireless
 Nigeria. This state was not one of the original investors but joined us
 later.
After
 five years, the governor of the state of Akwa Ibom decided to sell its 
stake. It had more than doubled in value in dollar terms, which meant it
 had been a good investment.
The
 state governor, an elderly gentleman called Victor Attah, sent a 
message through a friend that he wanted to see me in London to find out 
if I was interested in exercising Econet’s right to buy its shares. I 
agreed to meet him in London.
"I want to sell the shares to build an airport before I leave office," the governor explained.
The governor was accompanied to the meeting by a British lawyer who sat quietly taking notes. His name was Bhadresh Gohil.
With
 a wave of his hand, the governor said, "Mr Gohil is our legal advisor 
here in London. I have instructed him to handle all our negotiations 
with you."
The meeting did not last more than 30 minutes, as the governor was on his way to catch a flight to the U.S.
We agreed with Mr Gohil that we would meet with my own advisors a few days later to start the process.
A
 few days later, I went to his office with a professional banker who 
advised me on such transactions. We met in the lawyer's plush London 
offices. He was confident and smooth-spoken as he explained how much we 
were expected to pay. Then he explained that our money was to go to a 
"Special Purpose Vehicle" (SPV) before it was transferred to Nigeria. It
 was a sophisticated structure and he showed me a drawing of how it 
would work. I wrote it all down very carefully into my notebook.
___Such corporate entities as SPVs can definitely have legitimate purposes, but this one did not!
As
 I quizzed him about why such an unusual structure was necessary, Mr 
Gohil changed tact and tried to entice me with an offer I could not 
refuse (or so he hoped): "I'm also the advisor to the governor of Delta 
State, Mr James Ibori, and if you agree to pay for these shares using 
this structure, we will offer you shares belonging to all the state 
governments. In total, you can have more than 30% additional shares. It 
will be enough to take control of the company. My clients just want out,
 and they are willing to give you what you have always wanted."
I
 listened to him, quietly taking notes in my small notebook. I did not 
give away anything, but inside I was very angry. From the design of the 
structure, I knew immediately that it was meant to siphon off money 
before it reached the state governments. It was clear there was a 
conspiracy to steal a lot of money.
___Having
 already pocketed $13.5m, now the government officials could easily 
pocket probably another $100m through the sale process that they had 
developed with the help of Mr Gohil and other clever advisors in London!
When
 I left the meeting I immediately contacted the mutual friend who'd set 
up the governor's meeting. The friend was so embarrassed as I explained 
the corrupt structure clearly designed to steal money from the state 
governments. He promised to raise the issue with Governor Victor Attah. A
 few days later he came back and said Governor Attah had claimed 
ignorance about the proposal put to me by Mr Gohil. He said he would 
speak to Mr Gohil and tell him it had to be done properly without the 
structures.
We
 never heard from them again. Mr Gohil simply vanished. A few months 
later we were told that the shares had been offered to a company from 
the Middle East who subsequently bought them. I was not privy to how 
they did it except that they had violated my right to buy the shares... 
That is another chapter in the saga, but not for now.
Fast-forward
 three years, long after the sale. Our lawyers in London called me one 
day and asked if I could come urgently to a meeting with the Proceeds of
 Corruption Unit of the London Metropolitan Police: "You are not in any 
trouble, but I think you will find what they have to say very 
interesting!"
This
 special unit was launched by the British to investigate corruption by 
foreign government officials who try to launder stolen money to the U.S.
 and the UK.
The officers asked me to explain everything I knew about the sale of V-Mobile shares to Celtel (later Zain).
I
 explained the history of the entire transaction and the shareholders 
disputes that had led to our departure. After awhile, they asked me to 
focus on specific events, and, in particular, my meetings in London with
 the governor of Akwa Ibom, and also the meetings with Mr Gohil. It 
became clear to me that they had a lot of information!
"What can you tell us about this structure, using a Special Purpose Vehicle?"
I
 explained my understanding of it. Later on, I gave them my diary in 
which I had recorded the details of my meeting that day with Mr Gohil.
Below my drawing of the structure, I had written in bold letters:
"This is corrupt!!!"
Not
 long after my meeting with the Proceeds of Corruption Unit, Mr Gohil 
was arrested together with one of his partners and several others. I 
later learned that when the Middle Eastern company bought the shares, 
some of the proceeds had been diverted using the Gohil structure. Some 
of the money was sent to a bank in London. This large amount of money 
was enough to alert the British authorities that money was being 
laundered through their banking system.
Their
 investigations led them to Gohil and his associates. They raided his 
offices and found stashes of documents, including details of the 
structures. Now they were looking for witnesses to help prosecute them 
for corruption and money laundering.
The
 British authorities tried without success to get other parties, 
including the governor of Akwa Ibom, to come out and clear their names 
but they refused. Officials of President Umaru Musa Yar'Aduah's 
government successfully thwarted all extradition requests.
I
 was asked to be a witness in the trial of those who had been arrested 
in London. I willingly accepted. Next I will tell you about my role as a
 'Witness to the Crown" on behalf of the people of Nigeria whose money 
had been stolen. It would be the first time that someone big went to 
jail (in a foreign country) for stealing money from Africans.

 
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