Despite the intervention
of the Nigerian Communication Commission, NCC, to broker a peaceful resolution
between Etisalat Nigeria and a consortium of banks, it appears the effort may
not have yielded a truce, as the banks are set to take over the telecoms firm
today (Wednesday).
PREMIUM TIMES report continues:
The
consortium of some foreign and Nigerian banks, including Guaranty Trust Bank,
Access Bank and Zenith Bank, have been having a running battle with the mobile
telephone operator over a loan facility totalling US$1.72 billion (about ₦541.8
billion) obtained in 2015.
The
loan, which involved a foreign-backed guaranty bond, was for Etisalat to
finance a major network rehabilitation and expansion of its operational base in
Nigeria.
However,
following the failure of the company to meet its debt servicing schedule agreed
since 2016, the three Nigerian banks, prodded by their foreign partners,
reported Etisalat to banking sector regulator, the Central Bank of Nigeria,
CBN, and its communications sector counterpart, the NCC.
Although
Etisalat blamed its inability to fulfil its obligation to the banks on the
current economic recession in Nigeria, the banks said their attempt to recover
the loan by all means was fuelled by the pressure from the Asset Management
Company of Nigeria, AMCON, demanding immediate cut down on the rate of their
non-performing loans.
A
senior official of one of the banks who spoke with PREMIUM TIMES late on
Tuesday said one of the options they have proposed to Etisalat management as a
middle way out of the crisis was for it to request for a bankruptcy status.
The
official, who requested that his name should not be revealed, since he was not authorized
to speak on behalf of the consortium, said the bankruptcy option would require
having receivership management appointed by the banks to oversee its
operations.
But,
the NCC appears not to be favourably disposed to the takeover proposal, the
source said, as it believes Etisalat was not only a viable going concern, but
also willing and able to negotiate its loan servicing.
However,
atop source at the NCC said late Tuesday that the commission had approved the
takeover, which is expected to occur today.
Etisalat is Nigeria’s fourth largest telecoms operator, with about 21 million subscribers as at January 2017, according to the NCC. It commenced business in Nigeria in 2009.
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