The House of Representatives on Tuesday mandated its Committee on
Privatization and Commercialization to immediately investigate why the
Bureau of Public Enterprises and the National Council on Privatization
have refused to enforce the July 6, 2012 ruling of the Supreme Court on
the controversial sale of the Aluminium Smelter Company of Nigeria.
The directive followed a motion by Francis Uduyok urging the House to
call the NCP to urgently revitalize ALSCON by directing the BPE to
immediately implement the Supreme Court judgment on the sale of the
company.
Mr. Uduyok, who identified ALSCON, established in 1997, as one of the
largest aluminium plants in Africa, with great economic potentials for
Nigeria, said its privatization by BPE in 2004 had ended in a long-drawn
litigation over its ownership.
The litigation, he said, ended on July 6, 2012 with a unanimous
ruling of the Supreme Court in favour of BFIGroup, the company declared
by the NCP as the preferred bidder and winner of the bid for the plant
in 2004.
According to the lawmaker, the Supreme Court, in the ruling, ordered
the BPE to prepare and hand over ALSCON to BFIGroup as the rightful
owners, while the United Company Russian Aluminium transferred the
ownership of the company by BPE in controversial circumstances, should
be sacked forthwith.
The lawmaker said he had observed with concern that despite the
order, the BPE and the NCP have refused to comply without any valid
reason, pointing out that the company has consequently been abandoned
and allowed to waste with weeds overgrowing its entire premises.
“The refusal to hand over ALSCON to BFIGroup as directed through a
valid and subsisting judgment had denied BFIGroup the opportunity to
commence production from the plant, leading to multi-billion Naira
losses in revenue to the country, particularly loss of jobs to thousands
of youths in Akwa Ibom who wallow in economic hardship,” he said.
Consequently the House, in its resolution, asked the Committee to
undertake the investigation and report back with its findings within two
weeks.
In October 2013, at the height of allegations of massive asset
stripping against RUSAL, the lawmaker had equally sponsored a similar
motion before the Akwa Ibom State House of Assembly to demand immediate
intervention by both the state and Federal Governments to save the
company from destruction.
Although the Assembly, in its resolution, asked the then governor of
the State, Godwill Akpabio, to act to halt the vandalisation of the
company, and BPE to recover the plant from RUSAL to secure its assets,
no action was taken.
Following the controversial cancellation by BPE of the 2004 bid won
by BFIGroup, the House of Representatives had also ordered an
investigation into the crisis, at the end of which it declared the
decision to hand over the plant by the privatization agency to RUSAL as
illegal.
ALSCON was one of the companies privatized by the Federal Government in 2004.
Following the bid for the plant on June 2004, BFIGroup, a consortium
of Nigerian-American investors, led by Reuben Jaja, was declared winner
by NCP after emerging the preferred bidder with an offer of $410
million.
The company emerged at the expense of UC RUSAL, which was
disqualified during the bid for violating the bid regulations and
guidelines.
However, BFIgroup was later disqualified by BPE in controversial
circumstances, while ALSCON was handed over to the Russians under
questionable terms, an arrangement that resulted in a court action by
BFIGroup to assert its right.
After almost 10 years of legal battle, the Supreme Court had ruled on
July 6, 2012, to restore BFIGroup as the rightful owners of the plant,
an order that BPE and NCP have continued to resist with impunity.
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