A
consortium of some foreign and Nigerian banks on Wednesday took over Etisalat
Nigeria after the telecommunications company failed to pay a loan totalling
$1.72bn (about N541.8bn) it obtained in 2015. The Nigerian banks are Guaranty
Trust Bank, Access Bank and Zenith Bank.
A former executive
director at GTB, who was privy to details concerning the loan facility, told
The PUNCH that the action became necessary since the Nigerian Communications
Commission could not broker a peaceful resolution between Etisalat Nigeria and
the banks.
According to him, the
loan involved a foreign-backed guaranty bond and was given to Etisalat to
finance a major network rehabilitation and expansion of its operational base in
Nigeria.
He said that after
failing to service its debt since 2016, “the banks reported the company to the
Central Bank of Nigeria and the NCC.”
The Ex-GTB executive
director said Etisalat management was given the option of filing for bankruptcy
but the telecoms firm refused to take the advice. This option, he said, would
have required the banks just a management to oversee the telecoms firm’s
operations.
He said, “While all these
were happening, the management at Guaranty Trust Bank and the other banks
concerned had thought that the Nigerian Communications Commission would have
used its powers as a regulator to bail the telco out, or advise them
accordingly, but it became obvious that the NCC wasn’t so interested. It was
merely buying time for Etisalat.”
Meanwhile, workers at
Etisalat blamed the inability of the company to fulfill its obligation to the
banks on the current economic recession in Nigeria.
Speaking on the condition
of anonymity, one of the workers said, ”While the management continued to
blame the challenge on the economic recession, the banks replied that the Asset
Management Company of Nigeria regulations demanding immediate cut down on the
rate of their non-performing loans give them no other option.”
She added, “We saw this
coming and that is why most of our colleagues, in the last six months, kept
resigning.”
Although the NCC is
not happy with the takeover, a top source at the regulatory body said, “The
commission was left with no option than to approve the takeover. The NCC on
Tuesday, March 7, approved the takeover with effect from March 8.”
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