Lloyd's pursues what may be the biggest maritime swindle ever
At 10:50 a.m. Greenwich time on Jan. 17, crewmen aboard the tanker British Trident sighted a ship in distress off the coast of Senegal in northwest Africa. The Salem, a 214,000-ton supertanker, registered in Liberia, was listing and dead in the water. By radio contact with the tanker, Trident learned that a series of mysterious explosions was responsible for the disaster; indeed, a cloud of orange smoke billowed from the tanker's deck. By 11:30 the disabled ship's Greek-born captain, Dimitrios Georgoulis, and his 22 crewmen, most, of them Tunisians, had pulled away in two lifeboats, their luggage neatly stowed. Six minutes later the tanker's stern lifted; it went down in a churning maelstrom of spray and debris, plunging nearly two miles to the bottom of one of the Atlantic Ocean's deepest trenches.
Was this just another maritime accident? After all, 1979 had been a graveyard year for cargo vessels. At least 279 ships sank, weighing 2.3 million tons in alla 60% increase from the year before. Insurance experts at Lloyd's of London, now claim that the Salem was deliberately scuttled. If true, it would make for the biggest maritime swindle in history. Shell International Trading, which had purchased the 194,000 tons of Kuwaiti oil aboard the Salem, has filed the largest cargo claim ever received at Lloyd's: $56.3 million. Shell has also filed a suit against the Salem's owner, a Lebanese-American shipper named Frederick Soudan, charging that he purposely ordered the ship sunk two weeks after 170,000 tons of its oil were secretly unloaded in South Africa. Because of the magnitude of the alleged fraud, Scotland Yard has entered the investigation, and as a Greek shipping executive in London observed last week, "It's a lulu." At the heart of the mystery may be the oil needs of South Africa. Blacklisted by Arab oil producers, and with no wells of its own, the Pretoria government has said it will buy oil however and wherever it is available. Aware of South Africa's needs, a group of high-seas swindlers allegedly went to work. The prime suspect is Soudan. A resident of Houston, the 36-year-old Lebanese expatriate was an insurance agent and would-be oil broker who last October set up a one-man business called the Oxford Shipping Co. In November, using $11.5 million that he reportedly claimed later was a legacy from his deceased father, Soudan bought a ten-year-old Swedish VLCC (Very Large Crude Carrier) that had previously been known as South Sun and Sea Sovereign. Soudan rechristened his new prize Salem.
About the time that Soudan was opening his shipping firm, a man calling himself Bert Stemfortyish, with gray hair and a vaguely Germanic accentappeared in Piraeus, Greece, to hire a crew capable of working a supertanker. The load was to be 194,000 tons of Kuwaiti oil, to be delivered in Genoa to an independent Italian oil company, Pontoil. On Nov. 30, the shipSoudan's Salemsailed for Kuwait and picked up the crude. After four days at sea, however, the cargo was sold to Shell in a normal spot-market transaction. Shell kept Genoa as the point of delivery.
