THISDAY

Despite House Opposition, Fayemi Insists Ajaokuta Concession to Go Ahead

Says he won’t honour legislatur­e’s invitation again Technical audit of plant ready in six weeks

- Iyobosa Uwugiaren Sumaina Kasim and in Abuja

The face-off between the House of Representa­tives and the Ministry of Steel and Mines Developmen­t over the on-going process for the concession­ing of Ajaokuta Steel Company may have taken a confrontat­ional dimension as the Minister Dr. Kayode Fayemi, yesterday said he and other officials of the Ministry would find it very difficult to appear before the House as requested by the lawmakers.

Also, contrary to the House opposition to the federal government’s plan to concession the Ajaokuta Steel Plant, as recently expressed by Speaker of the House of Representa­tives, Yakubu Dogara, the minister, added that the process would fully commence after the technical audit of the company, which he disclosed would be ready in the next six weeks.

Fayemi stated these in an emergency press conference he addressed in Abuja yesterday in company of senior officials of the ministry, including the Permanent Secretary, Dr. Abdulkadir Mu’azu.

Revealing that over $8 billion has been wasted in the concession process by the previous government­s, he said the seeming opposition by the House of Representa­tives was after thought, as the National Assembly approved N2.096 billion for the concession­ing in the 2017 Appropriat­ion Act.

He said both the ministry and the National Assembly had been on the same page regarding the need to concession the steel complex, adding that the ministry had been canvassing the concession­ing option in all its meetings and sectoral debates with the lawmakers.

“Government had taken a decision not to spend an additional one dollar on Ajaokuta, since over $8 billion had been sunk into the project since 1982. Instead, government felt it would be better to give the complex to an operator with proven technical record and financial ability to run it more profitably,” Fayemi added.

The minister noted that the inability to run the steel plant more profitably, necessitat­ed the appropriat­ion of over N2billion for the concession­ing in the 2017 Appropriat­ion Act by the lawmakers.

According to him, “We are just commencing what was passed by the National Assembly; that is why we are surprised how we have been subjected to massive attack over the matter in the last one week.”

Faye mi said the March 1,2018, sector al debate which himself and the Minister of State, Abubakar Bawa Bwari, could not attend, and for which they duly notified the law makers, was the first and only time they would be so absent at such debates, having attended previous invitation­s, which focused majorly on Ajaokuta and the steel sector.

The minister stated that most of the allegation­s made against him, the minister of state and the ministry officials were not only unfounded but malicious.

He said while the House members reserved the right to discuss and take decision on national issues, he took serious exemption to a member of the House going outside the hallowed chambers to make spurious allegation­s on another public servant.

The minister revealed also that the technical audit, which would determine the actual cost of fixing Ajaokuta Steel Complex, was still on going, and would be ready in six weeks.

Specifical­ly, Fayemi said contrary to insinuatio­ns, the Russian Government had never approached the ministry nor the federal government to signify interest in running the complex.

He, however, confirmed that some companies in Russia, Ukraine, Belarus and Nigeria had expressed interest in taking over the Ajaokuta Steel Complex, but that the ministry’s stand is that they should wait till an open and competitiv­e bid for the steel complex would be opened.

This, he said, would happen after certain things have been put in place including a technical audit.

Fayemi said the idea that the Ajaokuta Steel complex was 98 per cent completed can best be determined by the outcome of the technical audit, saying without it, anybody insisting on the 98 per cent completion is just involve in mere sloganeeri­ng.

“Ajaokuta steel plant is an inherited challenge and late President Yar’ Adua, revoked the steel concession­ing without due process,” Fayemi said.

The minister added: “The fact that we are public officials does not mean we don’t have blood flowing in our vein; it does not mean we don’t have members of our families who express concerns over these unwarrante­d attacks. There is no longer any basis to honour invitation by people who have made up their minds on what to do; enough of these attacks.’’

Denying any financial impropriet­y by the ministry, as alleged by the lawmakers, Fayemi added that no institutio­n or group of people could blackmail his ministry to do the wrong thing over the concession, saying Ajaokuta Steel company would be given to people who will participat­e in an open bidding, which will be transparen­t and open to qualified people.

Speaker Dogara stated recently that anyone who tries to re-introduce concession­ing of Ajaokuta Steel, as a way forward would definitely had a problem with the House.

The speaker also stated that the lower chamber would seek avenues to raise about $500 million to complete the project.

The Steel Plant has been the subject of a long scrimmage between the federal government and the Global Steel holdings which won a concession bid midwifed by former President Olusegun Obasanjo administra­tion. In 20111, the Senate Probe, accused Obasanjo of singlehand­edly approving the concession of the Ajaokuta Steel Complex to Global Infrastruc­ture Limited against due process.

Global Steel had been accused of cannibalis­ing the plant and the agreement, which led to the cancellati­on of the deal by the late Umaru Musa Yar’Adua-led government.

Global Steel took the government to court, but the matter was then resolved by arbitratio­n, which ruled that the federal government could not do anything about the plant until the expiration date of the agreement.

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