According to reports, the arrest was in connection with a series of multi-billion dollar petrol import and crude export deals.
Mr Omokore, who is still in EFCC custody at the time of filing this report, has allegedly made revealing statements.
Atlantic Energy Limited was one of the companies that received
multibillion dollar worth of public assets without due process by the
Jonathan administration in 2011.
The company, which was created less than a year earlier and had not
produced a droplet of oil, was awarded controlling stakes in two
lucrative oil blocks – OML 30 and 34 – for just over $50 million each.
The deal, which was signed by the immediate past minister of
petroleum, Diezani Alison-Madueke, gave Atlantic Energy Limited a
controlling 55 percent stake in the oil block.
Curiously, Shell, which owned the remaining 45 per cent stake,
fetched $1.3 billion for a single field after an open and competitive
bidding process.
The company was also indicted for lifting crude oil, but only remitting a fraction of its worth to the government.
In 2012, Atlantic Energy paid $168m into the government’s account,
but lifted about three million barrels – valued at over $350 million.
In 2013, it also lifted about 2 million barrels of crude valued at about $240million, but paid only $68million.
Similarly, in 2014, Atlantic Energy paid zero cash-call, but lifted about 500,000 barrels of crude oil, valued at $54 million.
SPOG, another of Mr. Omokore’s companies, is also being
investigated by the office of the Attorney General of the Federation, in
an alleged N400 million petrol import fraud.
SPOG allegedly imported 3,000 metric tonnes of PMS but filed claims
for subsidy payment of 13,000 metric tonnes with the Petroleum Product
Regulatory Agency (PPRA), therefore pocketing N400 million more than it
should have been paid.
Also, Seven Energy Limited, which owns Septa Energy Nigeria
Limited, one of the business interests of Mr. Omokore, was also awarded
the concession of OML 4, 38, and 41 towards the end of Mrs.
Allison-Madueke’s tenure as petroleum minister.
Another company in the complex web of companies chaired by Mr.
Omokore, Seven Energy, is partly owned by Energy Resources Management
Limited, indicted in the import waiver scandal.
A Daily Trust report of December 2010 revealed that Energy
Resources imported 250,000 metric tonnes of rice into the country
without paying a kobo in import duties, levies, ECOWAS Trade
Liberalisation Scheme (ETLS), Comprehensive Import Scheme (CISS) and
other levies because of the waiver it allegedly got from the presidency.
Fivatek Nigeria Limited, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Energy
Resources Group, was also involved in the controversy-ridden National
Fertilizer Company (NAFCON) before it was sold.
Mr. Omokore was alleged to have colluded with Sunny Essien, a
former managing director of NAFCON and others, to funnel ₦10million
into former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s campaign account, largely
through the company’s account domiciled with the Abuja branch of the
defunct Trade Bank.
He is believed to have been indicted by the judicial commission of enquiry, which looked into the finances of NAFCON.

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