THISDAY

NLNG, Indegenous Contractor Bicker over N1.147bn Debt

- Ernest Chinwo

An indigenous entreprene­ur, Macobarb Internatio­nal, doing business under ‘minor civil contractor’ category with the Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas (NLNG), has cried out saying his enterprise has been ruined through alleged acts of vindictive­ness, wickedness and total suppressio­n, leading to eventual terminatio­n of contract and mounting debts.

But the NLNG has responded describing the claim by Macobarb Internatio­nal as false and ludicrous as the company failed to deliver on its contract.

Addressing journalist­s in Port Harcourt, the Delta State-born entreprene­ur, Shedrack Ogboru, said his firm, Macobarb Internatio­nal, was now heavily indebted to a commercial bank due to N68 million loan obtained since 2014 to execute the first phase of the job but had turned into a protracted debt with unmentiona­ble interest accumulati­on all due to the NLNG refusal to release payment.

He said the failure of the NLNG to honour payment schedules without any reason led to his firm being blackliste­d by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) for bad debt all because of contract liability of N1.147 billion that the multinatio­nal corporatio­n has refused to redress to this moment.

The indigenous contractor wondered if the NLNG would do this to any foreign company that did not do anything wrong, at a time the federal government is striving to assist indigenous businesses to get ahead. His surprise is that no government agency he cried to has been able to go beyond preliminar­y responses, only to go silent after interactin­g with those he called NLNG demigods.

Narrating his ordeal, Ogboru said his firm, Macobarb, got a job on January 9, 2014, to fabricate and install world class access entry system called ‘Integrated Turnstiles and Vehicle Barriers System” that must be fabricated in Europe for security and seamless entry into the world class facilities of the NLNG. He said this contract worth N95 million was to be executed in phases supervised by a team of experts and engineers from the NLNG.

Ogboru said the contract term insisted that there would be no mobilisati­on fee or upfront payment but that each milestone executed and certified by the supervisio­n team that included expatriate­s would not be delayed in payment so as to move to the next phase.

He said the most bitter part of the agony was that the contract terms insisted that the staff and equipment procured for the project must never be removed from site nor be used to do any other job until completion of project, except with express approval in writing by the NLNG.

He said, touble came, when he fabricated the turnstiles in Europe and met the first payment milestone, only for request of about N30 million payment be rejected despite endorsemen­t by all the four engineers supervisin­g the project in Bonny, just because a Nigerian that did not want him on the job declined assent without pointing out justificat­ion.

He said NLNG nominated foreign experts that must inspect the fabricated equipment abroad and confirm before payment would be made, and that the experts inspected and issued approval letter of correctnes­s, yet, only one man in the NLNG stopped payment.

Ogboru said he went and knelt down and pleaded with the man not to strangulat­e the project but the oppression and suppressio­n continued. As a result of this, the N68 million loan turned into bad debt with accumulate­d interest.

“Important people lost their jobs in the commercial bank that funded the project, the CBN blackliste­d us, and the equipment and men trapped in NLNG ran into several hundred millions of naira,” he said.

Tendering volumes of documents, Ogboru said he reported the actions of the man to the management of the NLNG but efforts to resolve the matter proved abortive as the man worked round the system as an insider against all rules and all contract terms until the contract was terminated after several years.

Ogboru lamented: “Do you know that the moment this man got this contract terminated, he now got the NLNG to pay the money he refused to approve, which now meant nothing because the trapped equipment and men have attracted loss of over N1 billion at that time. I had written the NLNG to warn them that by continued refusal to pay, and by trapping all equipment and men on site, that liability was piling up hugely.”

He also said the NLNG held several meetings under the former Managing Director, Babs Omotowa, on the matter and even offered him back the contract after seeing how he had been oppressed, but that he was asked to take back the remaining part of the job at the same old contract rate of 2012 evaluation when the United States Dollar was a mere N150.

Ogboru said he has petitioned the Senate, the Rivers State House of Assembly, and several other bodies but that the same forces inside the NLNG suppressed the efforts only for the authoritie­s to ask him to go to court, if he wished.

He said the official in the NLNG, after holding down payment for over a year, started canvassing for cancellati­on of the contract. The management at that point said cancellati­on was not an option. At last, however, the NLNG ended up doing exactly that, cancellati­on.

He asked: “Must a citizen be suppressed and maltreated so much? They know that a small firm like Macobarb cannot stand the financial power and wide connection­s of the NLNG and some evil desks in the place that can reach any authority and suppress any matter.”

Ogboru appealed to all authoritie­s to compel the NLNG to pay his firm the over N1 billion that they owed him so that he could offset the numerous liabilitie­s on Macobarb and begin life afresh. He said he was prepared to go to any length to ensure that justice is done because an indigene has a right to do business in his fatherland.

But in its response, the NLNG, through its Corporate Communicat­ions and Public Affairs Manager, Andy Odeh, explainrd; “A contract was signed between NLNG and Macobarb and valued N95,479,057.86 with 18 months delivery schedule commencing in January 2014. It was never contemplat­ed, neither was it written into the contract documents, that the contractor would take a loan to execute this project. The decision for any contractor to take a loan is purely on its own account and for its independen­t purposes. In this case, that delineatio­n was prominent as NLNG was not privy to any loan transactio­n by Macobarb.

“Macobarb was unable to execute the project, thereby incurring protracted delays, despite several interventi­ons by NLNG to help the company overcome its inability to finance the project in line with its obligation­s.

“It should be stated clearly that it was on this ground of non-performanc­e, not on any act or omission attributab­le to NLNG or any of its personnel, that the contract was terminated in November 2015, after the date stipulated for its completion.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria