Last April, at an otherwise sleepy conference in Paris to discuss new anti-bribery laws, a Nigerian delegate caused a minor sensation by standing up and berating a US official in the audience.
Everyone in Africa, he said, knew that US authorities would never seriously investigate allegations that Halliburton had been involved in a massive bribery scheme in Nigeria. After all, the company was headed from 1995 to 2000 by Dick Cheney, US vice-president.
According to people present, Peter Clark, the US Department of Justice official who handles such cases, boomed in reply: "If you think for a moment that we would shy away from a case for political reasons, you would be sorely mistaken."
Seven weeks later, the oil services company announced that the Securities and Exchange Commission had launched a formal investigation into the charges, giving the politically sensitive case new momentum ahead of the US presidential elections in November.
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