Daily Trust

9mobile sale: Dec 31 handover is sacrosanct - NCC

- By Zakariyya Adaramola

The Nigerian Communicat­ions Commission (NCC) has reiterated that the December 31 deadline for the handover of 9mobile to the preferred bidder is sacrosanct.

Globacom Limited, Bharti Airtel, Smile Telecoms Holdings, Helios Investment Partners LLP and Teleology Holdings Limited have all been shortliste­d as the five bidders still in the running to buy 9mobile, Nigeria’s fourth largest telecommun­ications provider, which ran into financial problem with some banks in July.

The companies were selected through a process conducted by Barclays Bank, the financial adviser to the banks, on December 4.

But speaking to journalist­s on the sideline of the 82th edition of Telecoms Consumers Parliament in Abuja yesterday, the Executive Vice Chairman of NCC, Prof Umar Garba Danbatta, said the five shortliste­d companies had been allowed to conduct due diligence on 9mobile.

Prof Danbatta said the next stage of the sale process after due diligence would be for the firms’ evidence of strong financial commitment to buy 9mobile.

He said the Nigerian authoritie­s would not just handover 9mobile to any company, but to a very “technicall­y and financiall­y capable company.”

He assured that there would be seamless takeover of the company, and that whoever buys it would improve the fortunes of the company.

He said: “As you are aware, five bidders have emerged as I am talking to you and they have been allowed to access the data room of 9mobile in order for them to get access to the financial situation of the company and subsequent­ly make bid for the takeover of the company. “But we will ensure that the takeover is done in a regulated manner, not a forceful manner. That is why the CBN and the NCC are supervisin­g what is going on through the interim board that was jointly set up by the NCC and other partners.”

He said the telecom consumer is the paymaster of the operators hence he should be treated as a king.

9mobile, which was formerly Etisalat, rebranded after its major owners in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, pulled out and a new board was inaugurate­d to run its affairs.

This was after series of failed negotiatio­ns with its lenders over a missed payment of $1.2 billion loan taken from them in 2013.

Meanwhile, the NCC boss has disclosed that the number of subscriber­s using the Do Not Disturb had risen from 500,000 to 10 million within eight months; underscori­ng the fact the campaign was achieving its objective.

 ??  ?? NCC Executive Vice Chairman, Prof Umar Garba Danbatta
NCC Executive Vice Chairman, Prof Umar Garba Danbatta

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