Italy court acquits Eni, fines subsidiary in Algeria corruption case

Eni, ex-CEO Paolo Scaroni (pictured February 2015) and subsidiary Saipem went on trial in 2015 over payments of 197 million euros ($230 million) to Algerian officials to win energy contracts

An Italian court on Wednesday acquitted energy major Eni and ex-CEO Paolo Scaroni of bribery in Algeria, but fined a subsidiary and jailed its former boss. Eni, Scaroni and subsidiary Saipem went on trial three years ago over payments of 197 million euros ($230 million) to Algerian officials between 2007 and 2010 to win energy contracts. The payments helped Saipem win contracts worth 8 billion euros, and the court fined the subsidiary 400,000 euros and jailed former boss Pietro Tali for four years and nine months. The court also ordered 197 million euros be seized from Saipem. Prosecutor Isidoro Palma in January called for Eni and Saipem to be fined 900,000 euros and for Scaroni and Tali to be jailed for six years and four months. The court found however that Scaroni could not be held responsible for Saipem's actions. Prosecutors said that bribes were paid to officials at Algerian state energy firm Sonatrach, where several top executives including the president have resigned over the scandal.