Buhari probes sale of NITEL, MTEL
ABUJA — President
Muhammadu Buhari, yesterday, ordered an inquest into processes leading to
the sale of moribund national carrier, Nigerian Telecommunications, NITEL, and
its mobile arm, Mobile Telecommunications, M-TEL by the government of his
predecessor, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan.
Speaking to State House Correspondents
after briefing President Buhari on the activities of the sector,
Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Communication & Technology, Dr.
Tunji Olaopa said that the President has directed him to raise a memo on the
whole transaction to ascertain if there were any underhand dealings.
He also stated that the President was
equally concerned about the quality of services rendered by the telecom
operators in Nigeria.
“The President was concerned about the
liquidation of NITEL. He is not opposed to its privatization but he wants to
know and he wants us to bring a memo on how the whole transaction was
undertaken so that he would know whether Nigeria was short-changed.
“The President was concerned by the
quality of service of telecom operators. The President is very concerned about
the whole issue of privatization that is hindering investments in ICT
infrastructure and that he will personally champion this. The President talked
about the potentials of the ICT sector in generating employment,” Olaopa said.
Buhari, however, said the probe was not
an indication he was opposed to the sale of the national carrier but to ensure
there were no underhand practices in the process of the deal.
Failed sell-off
bids
In December 2014, the Bureau of Public
Enterprises, PBE, after several failed attempts, announced fresh acquisition of
the national carrier by a consortium of investors known as NATCOM.
Director-General of PBE, Benjamin Dikki,
explained that NATCOM was a consortium of seven Nigerian companies, which
emerged new owners of NITEL and MTEL by offering to pay the sum of $252
million, an amount said to have met the BPE’s bid price .
Dikki explained that the privatization
process was a guided liquidation that would help bring back the two entities
which had lain prostrate for more than two decades.
According to him, NATCOM emerged the
successful bidder in both technical and financial commitment from the array of
up to 17 firms that keenly contested for the two companies.
Dikki said: “It is our fervent hope and
desire this time around we have succeeded in procuring a technically and
financially qualified bidder that will not only meet the deadline for payment
of the purchase consideration but more importantly deploy the required
resources to rehabilitate and grow these companies to play a significant role
in the Nigerian telecoms sector”.
Former Minister of Communications
Technology, Dr. Omobola Johnson had to confess that: “We faced numerous
challenges in packaging this transaction, including outstanding unpaid terminal
benefits of ex-staff of NITEL and MTEL; arrears of salaries of the retained
staff and outsourced security and huge accumulated unpaid licence and other
dues to NCC.”
Corroborating the BPE boss, Johnson said
that the consortium beat 14 other bidders at the primary stage and one other
bidder at the secondary stage to emerge winner of the bidding process.
She described the privatisation as the
last segment in a well-thought out reform of the Nigerian telecommunications
sector, which commenced since 2000.
Develop revenue
generation potential
Meanwhile, Vanguard gathered
reliably that the President also charged the ministry to work harder to fully
develop the revenue-generation potential of Nigeria’s information technology
sector.
According to the Senior Special Adviser,
SSA, Media, to the President, Garba Shehu, after receiving a briefing from Dr.
Olaopa, President Buhari also directed the Ministry to bring forward for his
consideration and approval, all pending proposals for the development of the
country’s ICT sector which require the approval of the Federal Executive
Council.
Shehu said that Buhari told the
ministry: “Where you don’t need exco approval and you are not in breach of the
law and will not lose money, you can go ahead. Now that oil costs less and we
are contending with its theft, we have to move to areas where we can realize
revenue quickly.”.
President Buhari welcomed the plan by
the ministry to use post-offices across the country for IT and financial transactions
especially in the rural communities, saying that he was happy to hear that the
post offices are being recovered from rats and rodents.
For the full story, check the Vanguard Newspaper.
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