Development and
Cooperation

Corruption: Nigeria scraps deals with Siemens

The Nigerian government has torn up a € 700,000 contract with Siemens for the supply of power-systems equipment because the multinational corporation stands accused of bribing members of the Nigerian government between 2001 and 2004. In October, a Munich court slapped a € 201 million fine on Siemens for international slush-fund operations. As the media report, the offences listed in the Munich verdict include payments totalling € 10 million to four Nigerian ministers, a senator and an official of the Immigration Service. After the verdict, President Umaru Yar’Adua’s government launched its own inquiry into the matter. Until the findings are published, Nigeria will not do business with Siemens, according to Nigeria’s Telecommunications Minister John Odey. The German daily Süddeutsche Zeitung reports a spokesman for the president saying that no one who broke the law in the Siemens affair will escape justice. (ell)

Latest Articles

Underfunded health-care systems: a doctor examining a pregnant woman in Congo-Brazzaville long before the pandemic.

Multilateral agency

Africa needs the WHO

Covid-19 antibody test in Lagos, Nigeria.

Pandemic response

Global solutions required

Traffic congestion

Fury behind the wheel

Tense relationship: Russian President Vladimir Putin and Saudi King Salman in Riyadh in October 2019.

Tumbling oil price

End of an era

Most viewed articles