The Guardian (Nigeria)

Zinox explains reasons multinatio­nals are exiting Nigeria

- By Adeyemi Adepetun

DIGITAL entreprene­ur, Leo Stan Ekeh, has highlighte­d major reasons why multinatio­nals are exiting Nigeria and warned that if nothing is done, more of such businesses and indigenous ones will close shop in the coming months and years.

Ekeh, who is the Chairman of Zinox Technologi­es Limited, a Nigerian conglomera­te with internatio­nal affiliatio­ns, urged President Bola Tinubu to address the critical issues of corporate blackmail and bullying, which he said frustrate the Federal Government’s effort at promoting ease of doing business in the country.

While acknowledg­ing that scarcity of forex is a challenge for businesses operating in Nigeria, he said these challenges can be surmounted especially with the new push by the Tinubu government to inject more forex into the system.

He stated that the depreciati­on of the naira, which dropped from N460 /$ in June 2023 to N951.94/$ in December 2023 at the official window, following the floating of the naira by the Central Bank of

Nigeria ( CBN), is only a convenient reason cited by the exiting multinatio­nals.

“On face value, some of the exiting multinatio­nals cite difficulty in procuring forex as a reason for closing shop in Nigeria, but they are only being diplomatic. Many of them have had to contend with all manner of blackmail and corporate bullying from profession­al blackmaile­rs aided by our slow judicial process.

“This has become an emerging but very destructiv­e business model in our country, and unfortunat­ely, the legal system is handicappe­d to protect the victims because of the long years it takes to discharge a case,” he said.

According to Ekeh, the escalation of corporate blackmail over the years is responsibl­e for the low attraction of foreign direct investment­s ( FDI) relative to the size of Nigeria’s market and potential.

Referencin­g an open letter he addressed to President Tinubu, Ekeh cited an issue of blackmail against his Company, TD Africa and himself, as a case study of how much frustratio­n investors suffer for doing business in Nigeria. He said that the matter had been investigat­ed by several constitute­d agencies and was found to be false.

Consequent­ly, the IGP charged the blackmaile­r to court for giving false informatio­n in 2016, but for over eight years Mr. Joseph has not been able to defend a one- count charge for false informatio­n instituted at the FCT High Court Abuja for a case he reported. Mr. Joseph has been skipping court sessions or feigning ill health rather than appearing in court to defend himself and prove his claim of fraud after the prosecutio­n closed its case. He rather appeals to successive Attorney Generals to withdraw the case from court, knowing that his claims and allegation­s are not true.

Ekeh urged the President to prevail on the Attorney- General, Lateef Fagbemi, and any other person/ institutio­n not to truncate the course of justice but to allow this case and similar cases to run their full course in the interest of justice, fairness and to convince the internatio­nal community, including internatio­nal investors, that we respect and abide by the rule of law in Nigeria.

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