Govt moves SC for Rcom bank guarantee
THE CENTRE’S MOVE ASSUMES SIGNIFICANCE AS IT COULD CLEAR THE DECKS FOR THE RCOMRJIO DEAL, WHICH IS AWAITING DOT NOD
NEWDELHI: The centre on Monday approached the Supreme Court to reiterate its demand of ₹2,940 crore in bank guarantees from Reliance Communications Ltd (Rcom) for its payment liabilities on spectrum, before clearing the Anil Ambani-led telco’s proposed asset sale to elder brother Mukesh Ambani’s Reliance Jio Infocomm Ltd (Rjio).
Justice AK Sikri admitted the petition and set the next date of hearing on Tuesday.
The centre’s move assumes significance as it could clear the decks for the Rcom-rjio deal, which is part Rcom’s debt resolution plan, and is pending before the department of telecommunication (DOT) for approval.
The centre approached the apex court to challenge a Telecom Disputes Settlement and Appellate Tribunal (TDSAT) order on October 1, which rejected Dot’s plea seeking bank guarantees before approving the deal.
Additional solicitor general PS Narasimha told the court that the centre was looking for some kind of a security for the outstanding spectrum dues. He said the centre did not have details of encumbrance of the land offered by Rcomasaguarantee.narasimha further argued that the telecom guidelines clearly mandate the government to secure outstanding dues only by bank guaran- tees, and by no other method. “There is no precedent for the centre to accept land/buildings as security towards unpaid dues...the land provides no such securitization and cannot be monetized on demand. Undertaking not to alienate property worth ₹1,400 crore is not in compliance with trading guidelines,” the centre said.
In response to the centre’s plea, Rcom’s counsel Kapil Sibal said the company was not in a position to make the payment as it was undergoing insolvency proceedings. “I can’t give a bank guarantee. If this deal is not allowed to go through, a lot of entities will suffer. Banks who are secured creditors will be in jeopardy and the deal falls through.”
The beleaguered telecom operator, which had been struggling with a mountain of debt and a failed merger with Aircel, finally decided to wind up its wireless business in December 2017. Back then, it had said that Rcom will essentially become a business-tobusiness (B2B) entity instead of a business-to-consumer (B2C) company, and will provide submarine cable systems with latest technology to meet India’s growing cloud infrastructure and data capacity demand from global enterprises and over-the-top, or OTT, service providers.
It had also announced a deal with Reliance Jio under which Rcom’s assets, including 122.4MHZ of 4G spectrum in the 800/900/1,800/2,100MHZ bands over 43,000 towers, 178,000RKM (route km) of fibre with a pan-india footprint and 248 media convergence nodes covering 5 million sq. ft, used for hosting telecom infrastructure, will be bought by Jio. Rcom wanted to seal the deal by March 2018, but all assets have not been sold yet.