http://www.the-times.co.uk/news/pages/Sunday-Times/frontpage.html



March 26 2000 INSIGHT





BP accused of backing 'arms for oil' coup




Political fallout: Lord Simon ran BP at the time of the coup
A SECRET intelligence report accuses BP, Britain's biggest company, of 
backing a military coup which installed a ruthless KGB hardman in the 
former Soviet state of Azerbaijan.
Turkish secret service documents allege middlemen paid off key officials of 
the democratically elected government of the oil-rich nation just before 
its president was overthrown.

An intelligence officer says BP hoped for a better deal on oil concessions. 
He goes on to allege that it later consolidated its position with the new 
regime when the middlemen arranged to supply the incoming government with 
military equipment in an "arms-for-oil" deal.

Just months afterwards BP was handed the lead role in the consortium of 
western companies which now dominates the oil business in the region. The 
�5 billion deal, described as the "contract of the century", was signed by 
Haydar Aliyev, the newly installed president.

Aliyev's arrival was welcomed by Britain and America, which have a 
strategic interest in securing oil rights. BP has close links to British 
intelligence and employs several former MI6 officers. Aliyev is a former 
KGB chief; critics say he runs a repressive regime.

BP, which merged with Amoco in 1998 to create one of the world's largest 
oil firms, admitted this weekend that it had been asked to pay a $360m 
(�235m) bribe to the top Azeri official appointed by Aliyev to lead the oil 
talks.

But the company insists it refused to pay and denies any involvement in 
overthrowing elected governments or link to arms deals. It disclosed that 
it has been conducting an internal inquiry into the allegations since 
learning of them earlier this month.

The Turkish intelligence document, a report on the alleged role of BP and 
Amoco in the events surrounding the 1993 uprising, claims the companies 
were "behind the coup" in which president Abulfaz Elchibey was overthrown 
and some 40 people died.

The report says: "As a result of our intelligence efforts, it has been 
understood that two petrol giants BP and Amoco, British and American 
respectively, which together forms the AIOC [Azerbaijan International Oil 
Consortium], are behind the coup d'�tat carried out against Elchibey in 
1993. . ."

The allegations follow disclosures three years ago that BP's security 
contractors in Colombia - a firm run by former SAS officers - were involved 
in supplying military equipment and training to a section of the Colombian 
army accused of human rights abuses.

The company admitted it had supplied equipment to the Colombian army but 
denied any wrongdoing. Last year it was criticised by a Commons select 
committee for having too close a relationship with the Colombian army.


The latest allegations will embarrass Lord Simon of Highbury, Tony Blair's 
former trade minister, who was BP's group chief executive at the time of 
the coup. Despite Labour's ethical foreign policy and Aliyev's reputation 
as a hardline autocrat, Blair gave him the red-carpet treatment when he 
visited London in 1998 to sign a friendship treaty and $13 billion (�9.5 
billion) in contracts with BP and other British firms.

When Azerbaijan won independence after the collapse of the Soviet Union in 
1991, the world's oil giants moved in to target the spoils.

BP's development teams flocked to Baku, the Azeri capital, which soon 
turned into a Wild West boomtown of intrigue and fast bucks where oil 
executives rubbed shoulders with local Azeri mafia.

To the east of Baku, oil laps on the rocks of the Caspian Sea, the 
discharge from abandoned drillings. Beneath these waters are at least three 
oil fields with an estimated 200 billion barrels of high-quality crude oil.

The intelligence documents, which have been obtained by The Sunday Times 
from Turkish government files, are backed by a detailed statement from a 
senior security official.

The agent described last week how he met with BP executives to discuss an 
"arms-for-oil" deal. He said the company had contact with intermediaries 
who arranged for the supply of arms to the regime.



---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
----

TO: CHAIRMAN OF INTELLIGENCE OFFICE
"As a result of our intelligence efforts, it [is] understood that two 
petrol giants, BP and Amoco, British and American respectively, are behind 
the coup d'etat"


---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
----

The former Turkish military intelligence officer said he was at meetings in 
Baku where arms deals were discussed. "Present in the meetings were 
representatives and what I understood to be senior members of BP, Exxon, 
Amoco, Mobil and the Turkish Petroleum Company. The topic was always oil 
rights and, on the insistence of the Azeris, supply of arms and mercenaries 
to Azerbaijan.

"All oil company representatives, including those of BP, offered the 
president and prime minister of Azerbaijan help in their war against Armenia."

He named one of those present as Terry Adams, then a senior BP executive.

In 1994 BP and other firms signed the �5 billion oil production-sharing 
deal with Aliyev to exploit the Caspian sea.

BP sources conceded last week that some oil company representatives did 
discuss the supply of arms. But Adams denies he or BP were involved. "It 
would be alien to BP's culture," he said.

Roddy Kennedy, BP Amoco's spokesman, denies it paid any bribes and says the 
company never helped supply arms. However, he admitted that the company had 
been asked by Marat Manafov, Aliyev's right-hand man, to pay a $360m bribe.

Six months ago Manafov disappeared after making allegations about "the 
secret dealings of the Aliyev family with oil companies". Police in his 
native Slovenia say they are investigating whether he may have been 
abducted or killed.

Insight: David Leppard, Paul Nuki and Gareth Walsh














"Those who cast the votes decide nothing. Those who count the votes decide 
everything."
Communist Tyrant Josef Stalin
(Listen anytime to Votefraud vs Honest Elections "crash course" radio show 
over the internet at www.sightings.com in the archives, April 3rd, 2000 
show, Jeff Rense host, Jim Condit Jr. guest)




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