President Muhammadu Buhari
President Muhammadu Buhari on Tuesday approved the dissolution of the executive management team of the Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON).
President Muhammadu Buhari on Tuesday approved the dissolution of the executive management team of the Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON).
A statement by the Special Adviser to the President, Media and
Publicity, Mr. Femi Adesina, said Buhari also approved the
reconstitution of a new management team for the corporation.
With the announcement, Mr. Mustapha Chike-Obi, the pioneer managing
director of AMCON whose tenure was due to expire in November this year,
has been replaced by Ahmed Lawan Kuru.
While the new executive directors (EDs) of the corporation are Kola Ayeye, Eberechukwu Uneze and Aminu Ismail.
The three new EDs shall be replacing Mofoluke Benedicta Dosumu, Hewitt
Adegboyega Benson and Abbas Mohammed Jega, who were appointed alongside
Chike-Obi in 2010.
Before his appointment as the new chief executive of AMCON, Kuru was
the immediate past Group Managing Director of Enterprise Bank Limited
before it was sold to Heritage Bank Limited by AMCON.
He started his banking career with the defunct Habib Bank in 1985 and
rose through the ranks to become an executive director of BankPHB (now
Keystone Bank) in 2005.
The appointment of Kuru and the three new AMCON executive directors became effective yesterday.
AMCON was created by an Act of the National Assembly to be a key
stabilising and revitalising tool to revive the financial system by
efficiently resolving the non-performing loan assets of the banks in the
Nigerian economy.
Its board was dissolved by Buhari last month when the president ordered
a blanket dissolution of all boards of agencies and parastatals
belonging to the federal government.
Just as the president appointed a new executive team to run AMCON, he
also demanded a comprehensive report on the liquidation of the Nigerian
Telecommunications Company (NITEL).
A statement by his media aide, Mr Garba Shehu, said Buhari made the
demand after receiving a briefing from the Permanent Secretary of the
Ministry of Communications Technology, Dr. Tunji Olaopa.
The president said he was concerned by the continuing protests of
former NITEL employees and other Nigerians over the manner in which
assets of the company were disposed of.
The president however said he was not opposed to the liquidation of the
telecommunications company belonging to the federal government but was
concerned about the process.
The Goodluck Jonathan administration sold the telecoms company and its
mobile subsidiary MTel for $252 million to NATCOM consortium in December
2014 under a liquidation process that was superintended by the Bureau
of Public Enterprises (BPE) and approved by the National Council on
Privatisation (NCP).
The NCP approved the liquidation of the company after four failed
attempts to privatise NITEL and a failed management contract in 2003.
Speaking to State House correspondents after briefing the president on
the activities of the ministry, Olaopa said that the president had
directed him to raise a memo on the whole transaction to ascertain if
there were any underhand dealings.
He also stated that the president was equally concerned about the quality of services rendered by telecom operators in Nigeria.
He said: “The president was concerned about the liquidation of NITEL.
He is not opposed to its privatisation but he wants to know and he wants
us to bring a memo on how the whole transaction was undertaken so that
he would know whether Nigeria was shortchanged.
“The president was also concerned by the quality of services of telecom
operators. The president is very concerned about the whole issue of
privatisation that is hindering investments in ICT infrastructure and
has promised to personally champion this. The president talked about the
potential of the ICT sector in generating employment.”
In the statement, Buhari reportedly directed the Ministry of
Communications Technology to work harder to fully develop the revenue
generation potential of Nigeria's information technology sector.
The president also directed the ministry to bring forward for his
consideration and approval all pending proposals for the development of
the country’s IT sector, which require the approval of the yet-to-be
constituted Federal Executive Council (FEC).
“Where you don’t need EXCO approval and you are not in breach of the
law and will not lose money, you can go ahead. Now that oil costs less
and we are contending with its theft, we have to move to areas where we
can realise revenue quickly,” the president said.
Buhari said he welcomed the plan by the ministry to use post offices
across the country for IT and financial transactions especially in the
rural communities, saying that he was happy to hear that “we are
recovering the post offices from rats and rodents”.
The ministry’s presentation to the president dwelled primarily on the
potential of the IT sector which Olaopa said contributes an estimated 10
per cent to the country’s gross domestic product (GDP) but could grow
to 20 per cent if some proposals by the ministry are approved and
implemented.
Culled ffrom Thisday
Culled ffrom Thisday
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