The Nation December 24, 2012

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THE NATION MONDAY, DECEMBER 24, 2012

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NEWS

NITEL p After all five attempts made by the Bureau of Public Enterprise (BPE) to privatise the Nigeria Telecommunication Limited (NITEL) failed, facilities at telephone exchanges across the country have gone derelict, the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports.

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•Gombe State Governor Ibrahim Dankwambo (left) watching as the Chairman, Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Kwami Local Government Area, Gombe State received defectors from the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP)...at the weekend.

•Lagos State Governor Babatunde Fashola (left), Oba of Lagos, Oba Rilwan Akiolu (second left), Corporate Affairs Adviser, Nigerian Breweries Plc, Mr. Yusuf Ageni and the Managing Director, Lagos State Signage and Advertisement Agency (LASAA), Mr. George Noah (right), during the media briefing to flag off the countdown to the Lagos Crossover Festival held at the Eko Atlantic City, Lagos.

•First Lady, Dame Patience GoodluckJonathan (middle), Minister of State for Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Oloye Olajumoke Akinjide (left) and Cardinal John Onaiyekan during the lighting of the First Nigerian National Christmas PHOTO: ABAYOMI FAYESE Tree at Unity Fountain in Abuja ... yesterday.

•Group Managing Director/Cheif Executive Officer, First Bank, Mr. Bisi Onasanya (left), Chairman, Benshore Maritime Services, Otunba Benson Akingboye and MD, Automatic Fit and Energy, Omoba Olusegun Aderemi, at induction ceremony of Society for Corporate Governance, Nigeria in Lagos.

HE first attempt to sell the Nigeria Telecommunication Limited (NITEL) to Investors International London Limited (IILL) for $1.14 billion in 2002 failed following the company’s inability to honour the terms of the contract. In 2003, Pentascope, a Dutch firm, took over NITEL and the company generated N51.43 billion as revenue in one year from 555,055 connected lines. However, after 23 months, the connected lines dropped to 440,000 and the firm incurred a debt of over N40 billion, which eventually led to the revocation of deal with Pentascope. In 2005, Orascom, an Egyptian telecoms giant, also failed to buy the company because its $257 million bid was below the reserved price. In 2006, the takeover of NITEL by Transcorp was celebrated with fanfare but the excitement was shortlived after the $500 milliondeal failed to turn around the fortunes of the company. Also, the last attempt to sell the company to New Generation Telecommunication Consortium of China at the price of $2.5 billion for 75 per cent stake in NITEL/MTEL was terminated due to failure of the Chinese consortium to pay the bid price. A visit by the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) correspondents to some of the NITEL facilities nationwide showed that while some of the exchanges have been vandalised, others have been taken over by weeds. Mr. Awoala Atuboinoma, NITEL Territorial Manager in Port Harcourt, told NAN that more than N1 billion would be needed to rehabilitate the 10 moribund exchanges in the territory due to years of disuse. Atuboinoma said the exchanges, with installed capacity of 24,000 telephone lines, could still be viable if adequately reactivated. He said the reactivation would entail the replacement of some damaged cables; purchase of 500KVA generator as well as replacement of the air conditioning system. Atuboinoma accused some road construction companies operating in the state of destroying the NITEL armoured cables worth over N1 billion. He listed the NITEL exchanges on Aba Road and the one in Rumuibekwe community as among the vandalised exchanges. He said the vandalised exchanges had installed capacity of 10,000 and 4,000 lines, respectively. The manager said the multi-billion naira government-owned facilities had not been properly secured. He said he had requested the Rivers commissioner of police to post 12 policemen to protect the Port Harcourt exchange from vandals. NAN reports that the situation is not significantly different In Delta, where the 18 exchanges with installed capacity of 32, 500 telephone lines had remained comatose since 2006. They include those in Asaba, Agbor, Ogwashi-Ukwu, Warri, Sapele and Ughelli. A visit by NAN to some of the exchanges in the state showed that few security personnel guarded the

facilities. A former manager in one of NITEL’s exchanges in the state, who spoke on condition of anonymity, recalled that the facilities broke down shortly after the company was acquired by TRANSCORP. According to him, the NITEL facilities in the state are still being managed by TRANSCORP since the Federal Government has not appointed a competent investor. In Bayelsa, Mr. Sokari Wameso, NITEL Territorial Manager in the state, said the exchange in Yanagoa, with an installed capacity of 1,000 lines, was shut in 2009. “We are still managing to secure the exchange, the NITEL premises in the state capital with the little sum of N10,000 management is providing to us for the up-keep of the premises,’’ he said. In Benin, the exchange has been taken over by weeds and reptiles while the one in Akpakpava is being occupied by the Nigeria Postal Service (NIPOST). In Nsukka, Enugu State, Mr Patrick Ugwuoke, the Chief Security Officer of NITEL, told NAN that the exchange was abandoned since 2006 when government retrenched many of the workers. Ugwuoke claimed that the security guards had not been paid in the last two years. “The facilities here would be completely vandalised if we leave,’’ he said. In Onitsha, Anambra, a security man on duty in one of the abandoned exchanges, prevented a NAN correspondent from taking photographs of the complex already overgrown by weeds. In Awka, unserviceable NITEL vehicles littered the premises of the hitherto business busy complex. Mr Sunday Eyo, Area Head, NITEL Exchange in Uyo, said the company had engaged the services of a private firm to protect NITEL facilities in the state. ‘’NITEL has about nine exchanges with installed capacity of 5,000 lines in Uyo,’’ he said. In Calabar, both the Digital Telephone Exchange in Calabar, the AbaCalabar Optical Fibre Transmission Link inaugurated by a former Head of State, Gen. Abdulsalami Abubakar, have been abandoned. Some residents of the city, who spoke with NAN, appealed to the Federal Government to suspend the ongoing privatisation process and retake full control of NITEL. They said reviving the company would provide alternative communication options for Nigerians against the background of frequent complaints of poor quality services by GSM operators. In Kano, a disengaged employee of NITEL, Alhaji Ahmed Tijjani, appealed to the Federal Government to reactivate the 19 exchanges in the state. “There are 19 NITEL exchanges in Kano State, two in the municipal, while the remaining 17 are in the local government areas of the state,’’ he said. Tijjani, who worked for over 11 years in NITEL, however, expressed regret that most of the facilities in the state had been vandalised. It is the same story in Yobe as most of the cables and poles in the exchanges have been vandalised.


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