Nigerian oil firm Lekoil scammed in London

Olalekan-Akinyanmi.CEO Lekoil

Olalekan-Akinyanmi, CEO Lekoil

Olalekan-Akinyanmi, CEO Lekoil

A Nigerian oil company Lekoil may have been swindled after handing over $600,000 to a consultancy which had promised to help arrange a loan from the Qatari Investment Authority.

It turned out the QIA was not aware of any loan it was delivering to the company.

Lekoil had already revealed the $184m (£142m) loan agreement to its investors, when representatives from the Qatari fund approached the oil minnow over the weekend to question “the validity” of the deal.

Shares in the Nigeria-based company were immediately pulled from London’s junior Aim market while lawyers from Lekoil sought to find the “full facts of this matter”.

Lekoil paid an initial arrangement fee of $600,000 to Seawave Invest, which is registered in the Bahamas, for introducing Lekoil’s advisers to individuals “purporting to be from the QIA” to discuss the loan.

Lekoil said it “will be contacting the relevant authorities across a number of jurisdictions without delay” to report “what appears to be an attempt to defraud” the company.

A spokeswoman for Seawave did not respond to a request for comment, theguardian.com reported

Related News

Lekoil will set up an investigation committee spearheaded by its new non-executive directors Mark Simmonds, a former minister in David Cameron’s government, and Tony Hawkins, the chief executive of Columbus Energy Resources, who joined Lekoil’s board just days after the loan was agreed.

“While Lekoil will take all reasonable actions to recover the fees paid to Seawave, there can be no guarantee that such attempts will be successful,” the company added.

The total loan fees, payable to Seawave and the QIA, were expected to reach almost $10m, leaving just over $173m within the loan facility to fund Lekoil’s plans for an oil exploration campaign at the Oga field off the Nigerian coast, where it owns a 40% stake alongside Optimum Petroleum, a local Nigerian firm.

Lekoil was founded in 2010 by a group of Nigerian professionals with experience in the international upstream oil and gas industry as well as in global fund management and investment banking. In 2013, the company became a publicly traded company following its IPO on the AIM market of the London Stock Exchange, raising US$50 million to invest in the opportunities it had identified.

Its CEO is Olalekan Akinyanmi and non-executive chairman, Samuel Adegboyega.

Reported by theguardian.com

Load more