After about four failed attempts, former state-run
telco, the Nigerian Telecommunication Limited (Nitel) and its mobile
arm, Mobile Telecommunication (Mtel), has been sold to NATCOM Consortium
for $252,251,000 (N45,922,264,700.53).
The government-owned telecommunication company was finally sold after four failed attempts.
The buyer
had earlier offered $221,000,000 for the telco, but it was a far cry
from what the National Council on Privatization (NPC) had placed at its
reserved price.
Announcing the sale, NPC Chairman,
Peterside Atedo, said the firm eventually won the bid after it
eventually put $252,251,000 on the table in the second bid.
He
said: "I am happy to announce that the resized bid has met the reserve
price. We are not the final authority. We will take it to NCP for final
approval."
Represented by the NCP's Technical
Committee Vice Chairman, Alhaji Haruna Sambo at the event in Abuja
yesterday he explained: "Unfortunately, one of the two pre-qualified
bidders, NATTAG Consortium, was disqualified for failure to enclose a
$10 million bid bond as clearly stipulated in the Request for Proposals
(RfP)."
According to him, "The Bank Guarantee or
Letter of Credit shall be from a reputable bank acceptable to BPE and
the Liquidator and be valid for 120 days from the deadline for
submission of proposals. Provision must be made for extension of the
term of the bid bond if the validity period is extended."
The
privatization, which the Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE) tagged
'guided liquidation,' the NCP chair said was done "after the review of
the chequered history of the privatization transactions of Nitel the NCP
at its meeting of February 27, 2012, approved the privatization of
Nitel and Mtel through guided liquidation."
Communications
Technology Minister, Omobola Johnson said the privatization of
government-owned telco is the last segment in the well-planned reform of
the nation's telecommunication sector, which commenced since 2000.
She
said government will continue to review and fine-tune policies that
will continue to provide an enabling environment for the growth and
development of private sector driven Nigeria telecommunications
industry.
Director-General, BPE, Benjamin Dikki
said the NCP faced numerous challenges including outstanding unpaid
terminal benefits of ex-workers of Nitel and Mtel, arrears of salaries
of the retained workers and outsourced security and huge accumulated
unpaid license and other fees to the Nigerian Communications Commission
(NCC)
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