THISDAY

House to Probe 9mobile’s Indebtedne­ss to Banks

- James Emejo

The House of Representa­tives yesterday passed a resolution urging an investigat­ion into Etisalat Nigeria, now 9mobile’s indebtedne­ss to 13 Nigerian banks.

The resolution was sequel to a motion by Hon. Saheed Akinade -Fijabi (APC, Oyo).

The lawmakers expressed concern over the circumstan­ces that led to the problems of the telecommun­ications firm, which commenced business in Nigeria in 2009 and the eventual exit of its Abu Dhabi-based investors due its inability to repay a $1.2 billion syndicated loan from the banks.

According to Akinade- Fijabi, “Etisalat Nigeria obtained a loan of $1.2 billion (N377.4 billion) in 2013 from 13 Nigerian banks which involved a foreign- backed guaranteed bond to finance a major network rehabilita­tion, upgrade and expansion of its operationa­l base in Nigeria.

“Etisalat Nigeria has so far paid about half of the initial loan amounting to about N504 billion with a total outstandin­g sum of about $574 million but had reneged on its debt servicing obligation­s after the interventi­on of the Nigerian Communicat­ions Commission and the Central Bank of Nigeria to restructur­e the loan and new repayment deadline.”

He said: “The failure of Etisalat to meet its debt service obligation­s with the banks since 2016 resulted in its foreign major stakeholde­rs pulling out.”

He rebuked the banks for their action, describing it and the renaming of the company as 9Mobile as a violation of Section 38 (1) of the Nigerian Communicat­ions Act, 2003, which forbids sub-licensing or transfer of licence to another party.

House Deputy Speaker, Hon. Yussuff Lasun, who presided over plenary therefore, mandated the House Committee on Telecommun­ications to conduct the investigat­ion and report back in eight weeks for further legislativ­e action.

The House similarly resolved to set up an ad-hoc committee to investigat­e what it described as low concession­ary tariffs granted by the Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment in 2013 to some companies for importatio­n of sugar.

Considerin­g a motion by Hon. Ehiozuwa Agbonayinm­a (PDP, Edo), members said it was inappropri­ate for the government to review the tariffs downwards against the five per cent duty and 70 per cent levy contained in the National Sugar Policy.

Agbonayinm­a said the National Sugar Developmen­t Council (NSDC) “had revealed that some companies had flouted the terms and conditions for obtaining a three -year low tariff running into hundreds of billions of Naira for sugar importatio­n into the country.”

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