Ministry of Defence arraigns Indian, Filipino, Brazilian in Port Harcourt for oil theft

The Federal Government has arraigned a Very Large Crude Carrier, (VLCC) MT Heroic Idun suspected of being involved in the illicit activity.

The ship’s 26 man crew, made up of Indian, Sri Lankan, Filipino, Brazilian, and Polish nationals were arraigned at the Federal High court in Port Harcourt on Monday.

The Ministry of Defence arraigned the crew on a three-count charge bordering on false pretense, attempted crude oil theft, and piracy among others.

Pleading his innocence to journalists, the captain of the vessel Tanuj Mehta who is an Indian national, claimed he and his crew were merely following his superiors’ orders even as he refers to his vessel’s encounter with the Nigerian Navy as a misunderstanding.

Sixteen of the crew members were present in court, while 10 were left aboard the vessel which is anchored off the coast of Bonny Island.

Udoka Ezeobi appeared for the defendants while Adewumi Aluko represented the prosecution.

The trial judge Turaki Mohammed ordered that they be remanded in the custody of the Navy aboard the vessel before adjourning the case to Tuesday, November 15, 2022 to enable the other 10 members have their pleas taken.

The Very Large Crude Carrier (VLCC) which is the size of three standard football fields and measured 336m in length and 60m in width, was initially accosted within the Akpo offshore oil fields in the early hours of August 8, 2022 and despite several attempts to arrest, it somehow escaped into the open ocean where she was intercepted and seized by the authorities of the Equatorial Guinea.

After months of intense bilateral diplomatic negotiations, the vessel was finally repatriated to Nigeria where investigations are on to unearth the circumstances surrounding her involvement.