French billionaire Bollore detained in Africa corruption probe

French billionaire Vincent Bollore, CEO of investment group Bollore, (right) speaks with Gilles, general director, during the firm’s annual results release on March 23, 2007. The French tycoon Bollore, Mr Alix and Havas international executive Jean-Philippe Dorent, were detained on April 24, 2018 near Parison on suspicion of graft over acquisition of ports in West Africa. / AFP PHOTO / BERTRAND GUAY

What you need to know:

  • News of his arrest caused the group's stocks to tumble over 8 percent in Paris.
  • Company won contracts to run Lome port in Togo and Conakry port in Guinea.
  • Detectives are probing claims that the group corrupted officials to clinch port concessions.

PARIS,

Billionaire French tycoon Vincent Bollore was detained Tuesday as part of a corruption investigation into his group's activities in West Africa where it operates several ports, legal sources told AFP.

The 66-year-old head of the Bollore Group was taken into custody in the Paris suburb of Nanterre for questioning about how the group obtained contracts to run Lome port in Togo and Conakry port in Guinea, the sources said on condition of anonymity.

The news that the magnate was being questioned in the latest probe into French business dealings in former colonies in Africa caused Bollore group stocks to tumble over 8 percent in Paris on Thursday.

The 195-year-old company, which has interests in construction, logistics, media, advertising and shipping, issued a statement denying "any illegal actions" in its African operations.

LINKS

Its director general, Gilles Alix, and a senior executive from its communications subsidiary Havas, Jean-Philippe Dorent, were also taken into custody, a judicial source said.

Investigators are probing allegations that the group corrupted officials to clinch the Lome and Conakry port concessions in 2010 and 2011 respectively.

The ports are among several operated by Bollore's African logistics arm, which also has several African rail concessions.

Investigators from France's financial crimes unit are probing possible links between the tenders and communications work done by Havas for Guinean President Alpha Conde and Togolese President Faure Gnassingbe.

In 2016, police searched the Bollore Group's headquarters in the Paris suburb of Puteaux.

NECOTRANS

Months after he became Guinea's first freely elected president, Conde summarily terminated the contract of Conakry's port operator — a subsidiary of French shipping company NCT Necotrans — and gave it to rival Bollore.

"Soon after he took power, Alpha Conde made a decision that surprised many. The management of the port was immediately given to his friend Vincent Bollore, without any kind of trial," opposition leader Cellou Dalein Diallo, who has lost two elections to Conde, told AFP.

"It is due to the ongoing inquiry in France that Guineans discover the true motive of this unjust and illegal move taken by Alpha Conde in the wake of his taking power," he added.

A French court in 2013 ordered the Bollore Group to pay Necotrans 2 million euros ($2.4 million) in compensation, but shortly afterwards Bollore took over the company.

Havas executive Dorent also worked on the communications strategy of Gnassingbe, who succeeded his father Gnassingbe Eyadema upon his death in 2005.

LOME PORT

After Gnassingbe's re-election to a second term in 2010, the Bollore Group won the 35-year Lome port contract — a decision also challenged by a rival.

Denying any wrongdoing in a statement Tuesday, the Bollore Group claimed it had obtained the Togo concession in 2001, before it took over Havas, and that it secured the Guinea contract before Conde's election, following the "failure" of its rival.

"Attempting to link the attribution of a port concession with communication services" was "a great misunderstanding of this economic sector and economic activity in general," it said.

It added that the company would "fully cooperate with the judicial authorities to restore the truth about those facts".

The Bollore Group started out in 1822 as a family-run manufacturer of paper for cigarettes and bibles.

Vincent Bollore, a close friend of ex-president Nicolas Sarkozy, revived the group's flagging fortunes in the early 1980s, turning it into a global construction, media and transport giant, mostly through acquisitions.

The group owns a majority stake in telecom conglomerate Vivendi, owner of the Canal+ Group which is headed by Vincent Bollore's son Yannick.

AFRICA BUSINESS

In 2016, Bollore's Africa business was thrust into the spotlight in a French TV documentary highlighting the miserable conditions of underage workers at a subcontractor of a Cameroonian palm oil company, in which the Bollore Group has a stake.

A year later, a Cameroonian rail operator owned by the Bollore Group was accused of negligence after 79 people were killed when a packed train derailed.

Other companies whose African activities have been investigated include former oil company Elf Aquitaine, which the French state was accused of using to funnel millions in bribes to African leaders in the 1990s, and nuclear giant Areva, which is under scrutiny over a controversial uranium deal in Niger.