"White people are making too much of this. As long as the Russians pay us, they can call it what they like," said one Nigerian in the commercial hub, Lagos, asking not to be named.Problem is, I wouldn't count on that Russian money arriving any time soon. They make this promise about once a year.
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But I would respectfully point out that Gazprom really should have picked a better name for its joint venture with the Nigerians. Let's hope this was just one of those accidents, but somehow I get the feeling that they will stubbornly stick with the name.
The following is a statement we put out today on the Nasir El-Rufai case in Nigeria.
Nigeria's El-Rufai a Victim of Trial by Headline, Say Lawyers
Crass tactics of intimidation and slander against Nasir el-Rufai reveal political persecution by the State, argue defense lawyers
LONDON, April 17 -- Mallam Nasir el-Rufai, the highly regarded former Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) of Abuja, Nigeria, has been relentlessly targeted in recent weeks by state-controlled media with aggressive slander and false accusations, prompting his international defense team to denounce this "trial by headline."
Here is a link to the press release on Reuters announcing Nasir El-Rufai's retention of Robert Amsterdam to defend against a raft of baseless, politically motivated charges by the Nigerian government.
Nasir El-Rufai, a popular Nigerian reformer who has faced nearly two years of investigations from trumped-up, politically-motivated charges has announced the retention of the well-known international lawyer Robert Amsterdam, of Amsterdam & Peroff. Mr. Amsterdam has a broad mandate to mount a vigorous legal defense of El-Rufai's reputation, person and property both in Nigeria and abroad.
Mr. A. U. Mustapha, prominent Nigerian counsel for El-Rufai, stated that, "the increasingly libelous accusations against former Minister El-Rufai and the ferocity of the campaign against him which violate Nigeria's commitments under international law prompted us to look for jurisdictions outside of Nigeria for additional arena for redress."
However what the Italians failed to mention is that the Russians have already pre-empted the North African gas market - going so far as to develop cooperation agreements with both Algeria and Libya, and are even proposing to build a mega-pipeline up to Europe all the way from Nigeria. It seems that you aren't going to escape the grip of Gazprom no matter where you look.
One reason why Eni might want to diminish fears about Gazprom is because they have gotten so deep into bed with the company, and are relying on their joint venture with the Russian state firm in order to further penetrate Libya - which is about to receive its first American ambassador in some 36 years. According to a story in the Washington Times, the Americans don't like it one bit that Italy is working so hard to help Russia control Libyan gas exports to Europe through their asset swap deal (which could put the pipelines to the continent under Russian control), as it reflects a decrease in competition and ever more political influence for Moscow over Europe.
The French daily newspaper Le Monde has published a profile of Robert Amsterdam. The original article can be viewed online here - below is an English translation.
Le Monde, Portrait, January 8, 2009
Robert Amsterdam, Lawyer without bars
By Piotr SmolarSince 2003, the Canadian business lawyer has been defending Mikhail Khodorkovsy, former CEO of Yukos, the Russian Oil Group. In the name of efficiency, he spends most of his time out of the court mobilizing his networks.
One must be cheeky to declare oneself 'communist' at the age of 12. Especially, when, as a lawyer, one specializes in defending big industrial groups against state interests. For Robert Amsterdam, this is the story of his life. He is audacious, hyperactive, he has no complex. He thinks fast and speaks even faster, some "f" words slip off his tongue from time to time when he feels at ease, just as if the word was the label of a true New Yorker.
For my part, I think having supported the Iraq invasion is very much worth regretting and over the past five years I've changed a lot of my thinking about national security policy and war and peace in general. I was skeptical of the merits of Israel's attack on Lebanon, skeptical about Ethiopia's invasion of Somalia, skeptical about Georgia's attack on South Ossetia, and skeptical about Russia's furious counter-attack on Georgia. Long story short, I'm strongly inclined to believe that political actors are much too eager to believe that the aggressive use of military force will accomplish their objectives, and also inclined to believe that political actors are much too eager to believe that bloodshed is morally justifiable.Perhaps the same could be said about Russia's eagerness to believe that the cutting off of the energy supply to Europe will also be just as effective in accomplishing their goals. It has worked to perfection so far.
While I fully appreciate the power and durability of culture, and the way that modern liberal democracy was rooted in Christian cultural values, it has always seemed to me that culture was more useful in explaining the provenance than the durability of democracy as a political system. Sam, in my view, underrated the universalism of the appeal of living in modern, free societies with accountable governments. His argument rests heavily on the view that modernization and Westernization are two completely separate processes, something which I rather doubt. The gloomy picture he paints of a world riven by cultural conflict is one favored by the Islamists and Russian nationalists, but is less helpful in explaining contemporary China or India, or indeed in explaining the motives of people in the Muslim world or Russia who are not Islamists or nationalists. Nation-states and not civilizations remain the primary actors in world politics, and they are motivated by a host of interests and incentives that often override inherited cultural predispositions.
Mudawi further said that Sudan does not see Russia's economic partner only and, but an ally to security. He pointed out that there are some areas on the African continent in which Russian soldiers take part in peacekeeping operations, including Darfur.
The Russian official, Margelov, stressed that Russia sees that all the problems in Sudan and African countries that suffering from internal conflicts should be solved with the help of the international community but without direct intervention.
Last month Sergei Lavrov visited New York for a speech at the Council on Foreign Relations, where explained the military intervention in South Ossetia as a humanitarian prevention of genocide under the UNSC principle of "responsibility to protect."
But the Janjaweed need to buy their arms from somewhere... One hopes that any Russian oil workers will have better luck than the Chinese.


