We Have Not Taken Over Etisalat..Banks
The consortium of 13
banks involved in Etisalat Nigeria loan on Thursday refuted reports that they
have taken over the operations of the company.
A management source
close to the banks who pleaded anonymity said in Lagos that there was no truth
in the report making the round.
The source said that
the banks’ major interest was the loan repayment borrowed by the company and
not takeover.
“We are not
telecommunication companies, all we want is our money,” he said.
The source said that
the company must pay back the loans in order not to jeopardise the economy,
jobs, payment of dividends and depositors funds.
He stated that it was
not only the banks that would suffer but billions of Nigerians, even the
vendors, and distributors doing business with the company.
“We did not take over
Etisalat as being insinuated, if we have taken over, it has to be registered
with the CAC.
“They are still doing
their business, they just want to weep up sentiment at the United Arab
Emirates,” the source added.
He added that the company
had about 20 million subscribers, adding that any interruption would affect
many businesses, especially SMES.
According to the
source, the affected Nigerian banks are owed about $570m out of the $1.2bn
syndicated loan with the balance being owed vendors and distributors, among
others.
The source said that
Etisalat wanted to pay only 10 per cent of the loan borrowed and requested that
others should be written off as non-performing loan.
He said that Etisalat
wanted the consortium of banks to pay $50m out of $570m being owed, which the
banks rejected.
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The source added that
the banks practically reduced the debt to between 20 per cent and 30 per cent
at a discounted interest rate of six percent below the market rate which was
rejected by Etisalat.
“All we are requesting
is for the Federal Government to wade into the issue and carry out due
diligence on what the loan was used for.
“A foreign company
cannot come and ride us in Nigeria, if this issue is not handled carefully,
others will do the same thing,” the source said.
The source said that
the company was avoiding negotiations which made the affected banks to fly to
London earlier in the year to have a discussion with a company with its office
in Nigeria.
He said that the
company was advised earlier before naira devaluation to convert the foreign
loans to local currency due to fall in oil price at the global market, which it
also rejected.
UAE’s Etisalat had on
June 20, said that it had been instructed to transfer its 45 per cent stake in
Etisalat Nigeria to a loan trustee.
Etisalat said it had
been notified to transfer its stake by June 23. It said the stake had a
carrying value of zero on its books.
In the last few months,
Etisalat Nigeria has been in talks with Nigerian banks to restructure a $1.2bn
loan after missing repayments.
The loan is a
seven-year facility agreed with 13 banks in 2013 to refinance a $650m and fund
expansion of the telco’s network.
Although the Nigerian
Communications Commission and the Central Bank of Nigeria stepped into the fray
to prevent a takeover by the banks, those discussions failed to produce an
agreement on restructuring the debt
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