A
former Minister of the Federal Capital Territory under the Olusegun
Obasanjo administration, Mallam Nasir el-Rufai, has said that a former
Vice-President, Abubakar Atiku, lied when he accused him of imposing
the Pentascope management contract on the defunct Nigeria
Telecommunitions Limited.
El-Rufai
was the Director-General of the Bureau for Public Enterprise when the
Federal Government entered into a contractual agreement with a Dutch
firm, Pentascope, to manage the nation’s telecommunications firm, NITEL,
on the eve of the privatisation carried out by the Obasanjo
administration.
El-Rufai
said that Atiku, who was Chairman of the National Council for
Privatisation, gave a written approval to enter into a contractual
agreement with Pentascope to manage NITEL on February 21, 2003.
El
Rufai whose allegations were contained in an electronic mail on Monday,
signed by his Media Advisor, Mr. Muyiwa Adekeye, said that Atiku’s memo
on the Pentascope’s management contract with NITEL dated February 20,
2003 was raised by a director of the BPE in charge of the duties of the
Director-General at the time.
The
former minister explained further that the Pentascope deal was made
following what he described as a competitive selective process following
an earlier decision that a management firm be engaged to prepare NITEL
to operate like a private firm in addition to preserving its assets.
He
added that the terms of the contract with Pentascope made it a duty for
the BPE to set up an executive committee to monitor the operations of
the company on a daily basis.
According
to him, the management contract was terminated in 2005 because it was
frustrated due to lack of effective supervision by the BPE and other key
players in the Ministry of Communications and the NCP under Atiku’s
leadership.
He
said, “On Pentascope, we see the same pattern of muddying the waters
with falsehood. As chairman of the National Council on Privatisation,
Atiku gave his approval in writing on 21 February 2003 for the
management contract with Pentascope to be signed.
“The
memo on which Atiku minuted his approval, BPE/I&N/NT/MC/DG/280, is
dated 20th February 2003, and was initiated by the director of BPE that
was covering the DG’s duties at the time. By the virtue of the high
office he then held, Atiku knows that Pentascope was not foisted on
NITEL but emerged from a properly advertised and competitive selection
process.
“After
the failure of the first attempt to sell NITEL, it had been decided
that there was the need for a management contractor to keep the momentum
of preparing the company to operate like a private entity and to
preserve its assets. Pentascope resumed in NITEL on 28 April 2003,
shortly before el-Rufai left the BPE to become a minister.
“The
Pentascope contract terms included obligations by the BPE to monitor
the contract, and for the NITEL Board to set up an Executive Committee
to supervise day-to-day operations in NITEL. Between the new BPE
leadership that neglected its responsibilities, the NCP which Atiku
chaired and which failed to supervise the BPE and the bureaucrats and
politicians around the Ministry of Communications, the management
contract was frustrated and terminated in 2005.”
El Rufai’s reaction followed an allegation by Atiku in an interview with Sunday PUNCH, that el-Rufai, as the DG of the BPE defied wise counsel to foist the Pentascope management contract on NITEL.
Atiku
had alleged that el-Rufai ignored public outcry against his choice of
Pentascope to manage NITEL even when it was proved that the foreign firm
was financially incapable and lacked the competence to manage the
telecommunications firm.
The
former VP had said, “On Pentascope, one would have expected your paper
to direct the questions to el-Rufai himself. The Pentascope scandal was
one of the issues investigated by the National Assembly and it accused
el-Rufai of ignoring wise counsel by imposing the company on NITEL.
“Despite
proven allegations that Pentascope was not financially capable and
technically competent to handle NITEL management contract, the former
Bureau of Public Enterprise Director-General ignored public outcry and
forced the Dutch company on NITEL.
“Before
the coming of Pentascope, NITEL was making an estimated N100bn profit
annually. However, as soon as Pentascope took over, NITEL’s profits were
nose-diving incredibly.
“With
telecoms stakeholders, the National Assembly and the Nigerian public
insisting that the imposition of Pentascope on NITEL was ruinous to
national interest, the Federal Government eventually cancelled the
management contract against el-Rufai’s desire.”
El-Rufai,
who also commented on the NITEL GSM contract involving Ericsson and
Motorola, denied Atiku’s claim that his brother was on the board of
Motorola.
He
also debunked the claim that the contract was split, adding that it was
awarded to Ericsson, “but at the lower price submitted by Motorola,
because of Atiku’s intense lobby and smears deployed to advance
Ericsson’s bid.”
He alleged that Atiku and his then ADC, Abdullahi Yari, spoke on several occasions to him to favour Ericsson in the bid.
He said that Atiku had a responsibility to explain to Nigerians why he was pushing for Ericcson to get the offer.
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