A consortium run by
Skye Bank’s chairman, Olatunde Ayeni, the founder of Sahara Energy, Tonye Cole,
and two other companies, have received the nod from the Nigerian government to
take over the country’s moribund, but potentially lucrative telecom carriers,
NITEL and MTEL, once they pay $242.3 million (about N42.4 billion).
The investment
vehicle, NATCOM Telecommunications, on Wednesday emerged the sole bidder for
the Nigerian Telecommunications Limited, NITEL, and its mobile subsidiary, the
Mobile Telecommunications, Mtel.
NATCOM has as members
NATSPACE Telecommunication Investment Limited, PCCW Global Limited, Prime Union
Investment Limited, Olutoyi Estate Development & Services Limited, Legal
Resources Alliance & Co., Sahara Energy Resources Limited, and LM Ericsson
Nigeria Limited.
Of the seven firms,
Mr. Ayeni, profiled as a businessman and lawyer on Skye Bank’s website, owns
three, PREMIUM TIMES can confirm.
He is the founder and
operator of Prime Union Investment Limited, Olutoyi Estate Development &
Services Limited, and Legal Resources Alliance & Co. There are suggestions
that he has link with NATSPACE but PREMIUM TIMES is unable to independently
verify that as at the time of publishing this report.
Mr. Ayeni is leading
NATCOM in its acquisition of NITEL/MTEL less than two months after he similarly
led Skye Bank to buy Mainstreet Bank from the Assets Management Company of
Nigeria, for N120 billion.
In 2013, Mr. Ayeni was
the chief promoter of Integrated Energy Distribution and Marketing Company
Limited, a group that eventually bought the Ibadan and Yola electricity
Distribution Companies, DISCOs.
Mr. Cole is the owner
of Sahara Energy, while LM Ericsson is a subsidiary of Swedish group, Ericsson.
NATCOM, which merges
the seven firms, appears to a new corporate entity created solely for the
purchase of NITEL/MTEL. Very little is known about the consortium.
If the group pays the
agreed N42.4 billion to the government, it would be a successful sale that
comes after four failed attempts by the Nigerian government to dispose of
NITEL.
It however remains
unclear whether the N42.4 billion offered by the consortium represents the real
value of the telecommunication carriers.
NATCOM emerged winner
after NETTAG Consortium, another little known group, was disqualified for
failing to attach a $10million bid bond to its bid submission as stipulated in
the Request for Proposals (RFP) to prospective bidders.
The RFP requires that
30 percent of the bid price be paid within 15 days of notification to the bid
winner, while the balance would be paid within 90 days.
The bid would still
have to be subjected to the approval of the National Council on Privatisation,
a requirement that appears more of a formality as Wednesday’s bid process was
organized by the Bureau for Public Enterprises, BPE, and supervised by the NCP.
At the commencement of
the exercise, NATCOM made an initial offer of $221million for NITEL and MTEL.
But the NCP technical
committee chairman, Atedo Peterside, who was represented by his deputy, Haruna
Sambo, rejected the offer.
The company reviewed
its offer to $252.251million, which was immediately declared acceptable.
“I am happy to
announce that the resized bid has met the reserve price,” the chairman, Mr.
Sambo announced.
According to Mr.
Sambo, following the disqualification of NETTAG Consortium, only NATCOM
Consortium’s financial bid was considered qualified.
He said apart from
submitting a valid bid bond, NATCOM’s technical bid proposal scored an average
of 92 per cent, which was considered above the minimum pass mark of 75 percent.
Nigeria started the
process of privatising the national telecom groups in 2000 as part of the
government’s reform of the telecommunications sector.
However, four attempts
and a management contract aimed at repositioning the firms ended without
success.
In 2001, the
government tried to sell 51 per cent equity to Investors International London
Limited (IILL) as the strategic core investor.
There was also the
failed management contract by Pentascope in 2005, the aborted Orascom Telecoms
bid in 2005, and the strategic core investor sale through negotiated sale
strategy to Transcorp that was cancelled in 2009.
The last effort was
the strategic core investor sale in 2011, where New Generation Communications
Limited and Omen International emerged preferred and reserved bidders
respectively.
Following the last
failed attempt, Mr. Sambo said the guided liquidation strategy approved by the
NCP was adopted.
BPE director general,
Benjamin Dikki, said the NCP was faced with numerous challenges, including
outstanding unpaid terminal benefits of ex-staff of NITEL/Mtel, arrears of
salaries of retained staff and outsourced security as well as accumulated
unpaid license and other fees to the National Communications Commission (NCC).
The Minister of
Communications Technology, Omobola Johnson, said the privatization of the
government-owned telecoms companies was the last segment in the reform process
in the country’s telecommunication sector, which commenced since 2000.
She said the Federal
Government would continue to fine tune policies to provide enabling environment
for the growth and development of a private sector-driven telecommunications
industry.
Mrs. Johnson said the
liberalisation of the sector in the last 13 years attracted new investments
valued at over $32billion entirely from the private sector, resulting in over
130 million subscribers compared to just 750,000 previously.
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