THISDAY

FG Terminates Concession Agreement with Aulic Nigeria over Alleged Contract Breach

- Ugo Aliogo

The National Council on Privatisat­ion (NCP) has terminated the concession agreement it signed with a concession­aire, Nicholas Eze of Aulic Nigeria Limited, the former landlord of Lagos Internatio­nal Trade Fair Complex (LITFC) citing breach of contract agreement.

Briefing journalist­s on the developmen­t in Lagos, the Executive Director of LITFC, Mrs. Lucy Ajayi, said that one of the breaches of the contract was the non-remittance of lease fees to the federal government totaling over N6.5 billion from 2008 to 2017.

She stated that due to the non-compliance with payment, the contract was terminated, noting that the property has depreciate­d from the original state which it was when government handed it over to the concession­aire.

She also noted that Eze had an agreement with Lagos Trade Fair, but the Bureau of Public Enterprise­s (BPE) did the agreement on behalf of Lagos Internatio­nal Trade Fair, adding that the contract was a developmen­t agreement.

Ajayi explained that the terms were that he would pay N40billion for the 30 years lease and government started with a N100 million. According to Ajayi, the amount to be remitted by the concession­aire was increased to N1billion per annum three years ago. She said: “They did it very small because he just took over and therefore, we didn’t expect him to make profit in the third and fourth year. But we assumed that by the fifth or sixth year, he should have made profit.”

Ajayi stated that in the last three years, Eze failed to remit the N1billion naira annually, but instead, he began selling most of the land he was supposed to use for developmen­tal purposes, “so that people could build whatever they want to build. Even without building approvals.”

According to Ajayi, “It was Bureau for Public Enterprise­s (BPE) policy that you privatise so that you can make more money. He reneged on the agreement. Initially, he thought BPE concession­ed the complex to him for that N40 billion. He said he didn’t know that he was not going to inherit the stakeholde­rs, but the stakeholde­rs already have agreement before he came.”

She explained: “When he was challengin­g that issue, the NCP in 2013 said if there is this problem why don’t you come and let’s workout those stakeholde­rs’ areas from the other areas, then we will re-compute what you will be paying. He agreed and signed a Memorandum of Understand­ing (MOU), when they say they were going to bring facility auditors to come and audit to tell him the actual amount that he will be paying.

“Then he went to court to get an injunction to stop that process in 2013. I saw an order which said maintain status quo till December 2014. He refused and was hanging on that injunction till I came in April this year. So we cannot continue with him. He is making money. He threw us out of the Administra­tive block and took over the gate. When I came in, I tried to get in touch with him, but I couldn’t.

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