Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
03ABUJA1357
2003-08-08 18:46:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Abuja
Cable title:  

CODEM ADVOCACY EFFORT STIFLED BY ALLEGED

Tags:  BEXP ECPS ETRD PGOV NI 
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C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 ABUJA 001357 

SIPDIS


E.O. 12958: DECL 08/08/11
TAGS: BEXP ECPS ETRD PGOV NI
SUBJECT: CODEM ADVOCACY EFFORT STIFLED BY ALLEGED
CORRUPTION INVOLVING MINISTRY OF COMMUNICATIONS

Classified by Charge Dawn Liberi. Reasons 1.5 (b) and (d)


C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 ABUJA 001357

SIPDIS


E.O. 12958: DECL 08/08/11
TAGS: BEXP ECPS ETRD PGOV NI
SUBJECT: CODEM ADVOCACY EFFORT STIFLED BY ALLEGED
CORRUPTION INVOLVING MINISTRY OF COMMUNICATIONS

Classified by Charge Dawn Liberi. Reasons 1.5 (b) and (d)



1. (SBU) Summary. Since spring 2003 Mission Nigeria
has heen pursuing advocacy in behalf of CODEM Systems,
Inc., a New Hampshire-based telecommunications firm.
CODEM has tendered bids on three separate contracts,
the aggregate value of which approximates $80 million.
Its proposal to Nigeria's Ministry of Communications
involves provision of radio monitoring stations and a
spectrum monitoring system, a $35 million package.
CODEM alleges that the Ministry has persuaded
President Obasanjo to award the contract to CODEM's
German rival despite its inferior equipment and
questionable financial package. Econ Counselor
briefed the Director of the Budget and Price
Monitoring Unit at the Presidency on August 1 and
requested that it conduct due diligence. We hope that
our intervention will pay off. End summary.



2. (C) Background. The bids for the project involving
the Communications Ministry were opened on November
16, 2001. The two companies in the lead were CODEM
and its German rival, Ferrostaal Nigeria, Ltd./Rhode &
Schwarz. CODEM quoted its bid in U.S. dollars;
Ferrostaal, in euros. CODEM asserts that when the
bids were open, Ferrostaal's original bid in euros
plus $5,225,928 on an unquoted part of the project
raised its bid about a million dollars more than
CODEM's. In what CODEM purports to be an undated
document from the Ministry of Communications
(MC/ST.0247/Vol 1 that may have been released after
March 2002),the latter recommended to President
Obasanjo that CODEM be awarded the contract because
its proposal was "more elaborate and properly
defined."



3. (C) Irregularities. Notwithstanding the
recommendation above, CODEM's Lagos-based agent gave
us a copy of a letter purporting to be from the State
House, Abuja, dated June 24, 2003 (PRES/81/36-1/93),
which refers to the document mentioned immediately
above but indicates that it was dated May 27, 2003.
This document carries apparently the signature of
former Minister of Communications Haliru Mohammed.

This document, which recommends that the contract be
awarded to Ferrostaal is strange on two counts. One,
the document may have been signed by the minister five
days after the cabinet of the first Obasanjo
administration was dissolved. Presumably, Haliru
Mohammed had no standing as a minister after the
cabinet was dissolved on May 22. Second, Ferrostaal's
quotation appears in dollars in this document, not
euros as originally quoted. Despite these and other
anomalies, a written annotation on the last page of
the document suggests that Obasanjo approved the
recommendation to award the contract to Ferrostaal on
June 24.



4. (SBU) Ferrostaal. Apart from proposing older
technology at higher cost than has CODEM, Ferrostaal
seems singularly ill suited to execute the contract.
Nigeria's Financial Standard of July 21 reported that
the National Council on Privatisation has uncovered an
over-payment of $100 million to Ferrostaal for work on
Nigeria's Aluminum Smelting Company (ALSCON). During
an August 1 discussion with a key official of the
Bureau for Public Enterprises (BPE),Econ Counselor
was told that BPE had recently rejected Ferrostaal's
bid for ALSCON, which BPE seeks to privatize, because
Ferrostall attained merely 55 of BPE's minimum 70
percent assessment benchmark to be designated core
investor. Ferrostaal not only could not produce the
$5 million bond; its check of $15,000 that was to have
been its bid qualification bond bounced. To top it
off, the Financial Standard of August 4 indicated that
"competent Presidency sources said one of ALSCON's
foreign partners, Ferrostaal AG of Germany, with about
7.5 percent shareholding [in ALSCON], has not paid any
tax on more than $3.1 billion (about N40.3 billion)
paid to it by the government for construction of the
plant." The Standard added that Ferrostaal owes
Nigeria N24.35. The BPE official with we whom we
discussed this matter on August 1 confirmed the
accuracy of the Financial Standard's reports. We have
also read that German judicial authorities are
investigating Ferrostaal and its CEO for alleged
corruption involving Nigeria.



5. (C) Beneficiaries. CODEM's Lagos-based agent
believes that that Vice President Atiku Abubakar is
siding with Ferrostaal in the affair. Along with
unidentified cronies, the VP is said to be working the
issue through a Professor Barzindo, an Islamic scholar
who was permanent secretary at Communications until
recently but is now permsec at Transport. Since the
VP is most probably constituting a war chest in
anticipation of the 2007 presidential elections, for
Atiku solidarity committee apparently are being
established, it should shock no one that he might find
Ferrostaal congenial.



6. (C) State of play. During our August 1 meeting
with Dr. Oby Ezekwesili, the director of the price
monitoring office at the Presidency, she said she has
yet to act on a recommendation that the contract be
award to Ferrostaal or CODEM. She said it is possible
that the Ministry of Communications incorrectly
recommended Ferrostaal to President Obasanjo,
bypassing the Federal Executive Council in the
process. But she added that if Obasanjo had approved
the award, she would have seen a presidential
directive, which, she said, would have read: approved
subject to due process certification. She went on
that she has not seen such a directive.



7. (C) Mixed signal. Notwithstanding Ezekwesili's
assertion that the Federal Executive Council may have
been bypassed, on August 8, CODEM's Lagos-based agent
handed us a copy of a document classified secret (EC
2003/August 2003) with a header that reads "this
document is the property of the Federal Executive
Council." The "memorandum by the Minister of
Communications" specifies that "the purpose of this
memorandum is to seek Council's ratification of the
anticipatory approval granted by Mr. President for the
award of contract for the supply, installation, and
commissioning of state of the art international radio
monitoring stations (IRMS) equipment and national
spectrum management system (NSMS) to Messrs. Rhode &
Scwarz/Ferrostaal Nig. Ltd at a total contract sum of
$29, 524,260.30 (off shore) and N384,681,190.61 (note:
about three million USD) (on shore)." Paragraph 14 of
the memorandum reconfirms these figures, but notes
that they "exclude customs duties and other clearing
charges" that are not elsewhere specified.



8. (C) Comment. We are inclined to accept
Ezekwesili's word, given the help she gave us to
secure the $49 million contract for Motorola earlier
this year, but CODEM's Lagos-based agent affirms that
she is deeply in the Vice President's camp on this
issue. CODEM's agent may be right, for Econ Counselor
recalls that Ezekwesili was rather abrupt in her
affirmations with respect to the contract in question
on August 1. We nonetheless will give her more time
to look into CODEM's allegations that the
Communications Ministry has perpetrated "grave
irregularities" directly or through third parties, to
see what response our representation will have
provoked. Should we not hear news favorable to CODEM
by the end of August, we will again raise the issue
with Ezekwesili at that time. We welcome views on the
appropriateness of the Charge raising the matter with
the Minister of Communications and the President at
the earliest opportunity. We continue to hope that
our advocacy will pay off.


LIBERI