Singapore charges 3 more suspects in Shell refinery oil heist

Reuters  |  SINGAPORE 

By John Geddie

(Reuters) - A on Saturday charged three men suspected of involvement in large-scale theft at Shell's biggest refinery, days after bringing charges against 11 under an extensive probe by authorities in the city state.

The subsidiary of Plc first contacted the city-state's authorities in August 2017 about theft at its industrial site, just south of the country's main island.

Police have seized millions of dollars in cash and a small tanker in the sting operation involving simultaneous raids across

A charged 11 men including eight Shell employees and two Vietnamese nationals on Tuesday related to the theft following a weekend raid arresting 17 people.

The latest three to be charged also included a Vietnamese national.

They are accused of receiving stolen property, with a combined value of S$896,444 ($676,510.45), at site, where Shell has its largest refinery, according to documents.

The amount of products involved in the theft on two days in late 2017 were in addition to more than 4,300 tonnes of gasoil valued at S$2.4 million specified in charges brought against the 11 on Tuesday.

A said the men charged on Saturday were not employees of the company.

The documents listed two vessels used in the transfer of stolen products on Nov. 11 and Dec. 31 at two wharfs on the site.

Sentek 26, which carries a flag, and have been travelling around the city state over the last 30 days, both making one journey down to the Indonesian island of in late December, data shows.

The 26, Sentek Marine & Trading Pte, was the biggest bunker fuel supplier in by volume last year, according to official data.

is one of the world's most important trading hubs, with much of the Middle East's passing through before being delivered to the huge consumers in China, and

is also Southeast Asia's main hub and the world's biggest marine refuelling stop.

Illicit trading is widespread in where stolen fuel is sold across the region, often offloaded directly into trucks or tanks at small harbours away from terminals.

($1 = 1.3251 dollars)

(Reporting by John Geddie, additional reporting by Roslan Khasawneh and Florence Tan; Writing by Jack Kim; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sat, January 13 2018. 09:49 IST