Notorious arms dealer, wanted in Nigeria, lands multi-million dollar deal in Senegal
Acontract seen by OCCRP shows how Aboubakar Hima, who
allegedly skimmed millions from $240 million in corrupt arms deals in his
native Niger, may be up to his old tricks further from home.
At the beginning of this year, a Senegalese state agency
signed a deal to purchase $77 million worth of assault rifles, semi-automatic
pistols, ammunition, and other weapons from a little-known local firm that had
only been set up a couple months earlier.
The contract was unusual in other ways, too. The agency that
bought the arms was not the military, but the Environment Ministry. Still, the
contract was never put out to bid, and once the deal was signed it was kept
quiet, ostensibly due to Senegal’s defense security law. But OCCRP, in
partnership with the Israeli newspaper Haaretz, learned of the deal and
obtained a copy of the contract.
The supplier of the arms, Lavie Commercial Brokers, turns
out to have been set up by the notorious West African businessman Aboubakar
Hima, who is suspected of siphoning millions from inflated arms deals in
Nigeria and his home country of Niger. An expert who discussed the Senegal deal
with OCCRP reporters said irregularities in the contract suggested its price
might also have been inflated.
Hima, who is often known by the nickname “Petit Boubé,” is
no stranger to controversy. He has had some of his millions seized by the U.S.
and South African authorities over illicit arms deals, and is wanted in Nigeria
for his alleged role in making fraudulent arms deals with the government. In
2020, OCCRP revealed that a Nigerien government audit found Hima had brokered
corrupt arms deals worth $240 million.
Perhaps conscious of his own notoriety, Hima may have sought
to disguise his involvement in the Senegalese arms contract. While he is the
only person named on registration documents for Lavie Commercial Brokers, the
contract was signed on his firm’s behalf by Israel-based David Benzaquen, the
company’s general manager.
Benzaquen founded an Israeli company called Lavie
Strategies, which is licensed to export weapons by Israel’s Ministry of
Defense. He is a former employee of Israeli arms dealer Gabi Peretz, a close
friend of Senegal’s President Macky Sall. Peretz is known to supply military
equipment to countries in West and Central Africa. Around the time that Hima’s
firm obtained the Senegal contract, Peretz offered a 300-million-euro credit
line to the Senegalese military, according
to the Africa Intelligence news outlet.
In an emailed response to questions, Peretz said he had not
had any contact with Hima since at least 2015 and had no knowledge of Lavie
Commercial Brokers. He said Benzaquen had not worked for him since 2018 and
“does not represent us,” and that he had no knowledge of Lavie’s contract in
Senegal.
Senegal has been fighting a decades-long armed conflict with
rebels in the southern Casamance region, along its borders with Gambia and
Guinea-Bissau. Guerilla groups in the forests have smuggled timber and cannabis
to finance themselves, and Senegalese forest rangers — overseen by the
Environment Ministry — must arm themselves as a result. But experts questioned
whether the Environment Ministry should have signed such a large and secretive
weapons contract.
“We can ask ourselves the question if it is really necessary
[for forest rangers to have assault rifles],” said Professor Semou Ndiaye, a
consultant and researcher in corruption and good governance. “[The arrangement]
is opaque. It is a deal that is directly arranged and naturally, there is a
risk of corruption…the authorities can do as they see fit and there is a
heightened risk of overpricing [of contracts].”
An analyst with experience in the security sector in
Senegal, who asked not to be named as he was not authorized to speak to
reporters, said it was “very unlikely” the Environment Ministry would need to
spend tens of millions on arms.
“There have been recent increases in fighting between the
army and rebels in Casamance, but I am not aware of any major incidents with
the forest rangers,” he said. “I don’t think such a big contract should be
signed by a single ministry without the involvement of security forces. And the
Environment Ministry is obviously not buying weapons for the army.”
Experts also said it was surprising and problematic that
Senegal would ink a major arms deal with a dealer found to be defrauding other
governments.
“No responsible buyer, whether a government agency or a
private company, does business with an individual who has a record of fraudulent
dealing,” said Richard Messick, a former senior operations specialist at the
World Bank who now consults for international organizations on legal
development and anticorruption.
“It may be that the accusations against Mr. Hima are without
merit. A responsible buyer would make absolutely sure of that before
contracting with him,” he added.
Abdou Karim Sall and Aboulaye Daouda Diallo, who signed the
contract in their respective roles as Minister of Environment and Minister of
Finance at the time, did not respond to multiple requests for comment.
OCCRP could not reach Hima for comment. Reporters sent
detailed questions to Hima’s Nigerian lawyer Kayode Ajulo, but he refused to
pass them on to his client. “I don’t run such errands,” he said.
Haaretz contacted Benzaquen by telephone, but he refused to
respond to questions. Senegal’s Ministries of Environment and Finance did not
respond to written questions.
From Paper to Bullets
Hima’s path to West African arms dealer was an
unconventional one, aided by his marriage and the necessities of war.
His first known business was Imprimerie du Plateau, a
printing firm he set up in Niger in 2003.
In 2005 he married the daughter of the country’s former
president, Ibrahim Bare Maïnassara, who had been killed in a coup some years
earlier. The marriage brought him closer to Niger’s political establishment,
and by 2010 he was in the arms business in neighboring Nigeria.
In Nigeria, Hima made a fortune during the 2010-2015
administration of President Goodluck Jonathan. He worked frequently with Sambo
Dasuki, a national security adviser to the Jonathan government who was later
accused of mismanaging $2.1 billion connected to arms deals.
Hima set up a Nigerian arms-dealing firm, Societe
D’Equipments Internationaux Nigeria Ltd, in May 2014, not long after nearly 300
Nigerian schoolgirls were abducted by Boko Haram Islamic militants. Facing
immense pressure to rescue the girls but under a U.S. arms embargo, the
Nigerian government turned to brokers like Hima.
Between 2014 and 2015, Hima netted over $400 million in
fraudulent arms contracts, according to the country’s Economic and Financial
Crimes Commission, which claimed he received government money for the purchase
of military equipment for Nigerian forces but didn’t supply all of the gear.
Hima allegedly bribed Nigerian military officers to win
these contracts, according to Nigerian court records. One was Alkali Mohammadu
Mamu, a former group managing director of the Nigerian air force’s holding
company, who was found guilty of corruption after taking $300,000 in currency
and an unknown number of cars from Hima.
The Nigerian findings were similar to the findings of the
Inspection Générale des Armées, an independent body that audits the armed
forces in Niger. Auditors, looking at the period 2011 to 2019, discovered that
many deals Hima facilitated in that country were significantly overpriced and
the equipment was sometimes never delivered. Those deals by Hima, according to
the audit report, were worth $240 million.
Red Flags and Five-Star Travel
OCCRP could not confirm whether the weapons in the Senegal
deal have been delivered, but the contract covers a wide range of materials and
services, from guns and ammunition to boats, pick-up trucks, cars, uniforms,
and even drone training courses. Lavie Commercial Brokers agreed to finance the
deal upfront, with the Senegalese authorities then paying the company in
installments of about 9.06 billion CFA francs ($15.4 million) annually until
2026.
The Senegal deal also provides for two Lavie-funded trips to
Dubai for a six-person Senegalese delegation, so that officials can inspect the
items before their delivery to Senegal. The contract says the officials are to
travel business class and stay at a five-star hotel.
Experts said the contract has red flags for artificially
inflated pricing — the same offense that Hima was previously accused of in
Niger and Nigeria. Most concerningly, the costs are not itemized. Instead, only
the single lump sum of 45.3 billion CFA francs ($77 million) is cited in the
document.
“Good practice in any contract for goods or equipment is to
itemize the price of the individual items,” said Messick, the former World Bank
specialist and corruption expert.
“When a single price is quoted for numerous items…it is very
hard to know whether the government is being overcharged,” Messick told OCCRP.
Chidi Nwaonu, a defense expert with London-based Peccavi
Consulting, also said the lack of price itemization in the contract was a red
flag.
“The arms trade is traditionally opaque and corrupt but in
Africa it is even more so as arms purchases are shrouded by ‘national
security,’” he added.
A transparency campaign group representative in Senegal
called for an investigation into the contract and warned of the damaging effect
corruption has on the country.
“Corruption weakens the Senegalese state and compromises the
development and stability of the country,” said Papa Fara Diallo, president of
the Seneglese office of Publish What You Pay, a global coalition of
pro-transparency campaigners. “Even if defense secrets mean certain pieces of
information cannot be made public, that does not mean the authorities can allow
acts of corruption or embezzlement of public money.”
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