Banks are exposing the businesses and
people behind the mountain of debts threatening to kill the sector –
courtesy of a Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) directive that expired at
the weekend.
Barring unforeseen developments, some of the banks will begin the publication of their debtors’ list today.
The publications are coming on the heels of the July 31, 2015 deadline set by the apex bank for the debtors to pay up.
Continue reading after the cut....
The lists, an official of one of the
banks said, is just a part of the whole. “Some debtors have entered
into various payment schemes to avoid being shamed by this exercise,”
the bank official, who pleaded not to be identified because of “the
sensitivity of the action”, said.
The debtors are to be blacklisted and
banned from participating in the foreign exchange market as well as
trading in the Nigerian Government Securities market. The publication of
the debtors’ lists is to be a continuous exercise.
Union Bank is owed huge sums by 176
debtors. Six customers collectively owe the bank N27.91 billion. They
are Dec Oil & Gas, owing N15.7 billion following a 1999 contract
finance loan that expired in 2000. The directors of the company are
Patrick Ugboma and Pius U. Malaka.
Other debtors include Alliance Energy,
which is owing the bank N4.92 billion. The term loan approved in 2004
expired 2006. The directors are Akinwale Omoboriowo, Kojo Anan and Timi
Austen-Peters.
Hajaig Construction is owing the bank
N2.99 billion on a loan approved in 2012 and which expired in 2014. The
directors are Abdul Nasser Hajaig, Rud Wan Hajaig and Mohammed Hajaig.
Sapta International Industries Limited
is owing the bank N1.87 billion over a 1987 term loan that expired in
1988. The directors are Alex Aloy Nwokodikwa and Clement Nwokodikwa.
Petroleum Project International has a
debt of N1.25 billion over a term loan obtained in 2004 that expired in
2007. The directors are Akinwale Omoboriowo, Kojo Anan and Timi
Austen-Peters.
Best Aluminum owes N1.11 billion for
import and lease facilities obtained between 2010 and 2012. The
directors are Chief Godwin Nweke and Chief Pius Nweke.
Fidelity Bank’s debtors include the
telephone firm Starcomms Limited, which owes N3.08 billion cumulatively
in the three accounts it runs with the lender under the same name and
directors. The first account, which got in 2009 an overdraft which
expired in 2014, is owing the bank N1.68 billion; the second account, a
term loan approved in 2011 and which expired in 2014, is indebted to the
tune of N1.16 billion. The third account, also an overdraft approved in
2007 and expired 2014, is indebted up to N239.65 million. The directors
are Chief Maan Lababidi, Paul Edwards, Tajudeen Dantata, Omar Lababidi,
Dr. Chris Ogbechie and Olusola Oladokun.
Fidelity released a list of 28 customers
with “delinquent” loans. Other customers include Kesio Associates,
which is owing the bank N328.1 million and Diesel Solutions (N324.28
million). Patemglobal Limited is owing the bank N268.5 million.
Kasolute Nigeria Limited owes Sterling
Bank Plc N475.3 million over an overdraft loan approved in 1999, which
expired in 2000. Just Jays Limited owes the bank N254.7 million; Alcun
Industries Limited owes N192.1 million. G.Cyrus Global Resources is
owing the bank N187 million.
One bank executive told The Nation
that many of the banks offered some debtors who made moves to settle
“their long-outstanding loans the option of rescheduling, or making
part-payment of the loans.
“Those that have reached this
understanding with their banks have their names removed from the
published debtors list, “ he said, adding that the other category whose
names are missing from the list, are those that are contesting their
indebtedness in the courts.
“The CBN has directed that all cases
that are in the purview of the courts should be reserved for judicial
determination and resolution,” the official said.
He said the Loan Recovery unit of the
banks were still working hard, compiling the list of other debtors.
“This publish and shame strategy would continue, as the next category
of NPLs falls due, except otherwise directed by the regulator, he
stressed,” the source said.
A CBN official, who spoke in confidence,
said the resolve of the apex bank to adopt “the publish and shame”
strategy was as a result of the failure of persuasion which many of the
banks have adopted over the years. He warned that this would be the
beginning of a long-battle aimed at recovering all outstanding loans
due the lenders.
Some of the facilities in the bank books
are classified as overdrafts, project financing, term loans and others
which are said to be unauthorised credit advances. The NPLs range from
one to over five years in many instances.
However, there are strong indications
that much pressure is being mounted by some prominent debtors against
the publication of the debtors’ list. The Nation learnt that
about two to three banks have withdrawn the list they sent to some media
houses for publication, saying they required more time to clean them
up.
A banker, who craved anonymity, said he
was concerned that the strategy that these debtors applied in the past
to evade settlement of their debts might come to play again. He said
many of the debtors were strong enough to offset their indebtedness, but
regretted that lack of determination to apply the rules always favoured
them.
A Lagos lawyer, Chief Ajibola Aribisala (SAN), told The Nation earlier
that it would be an uphill task to get the true debtors’ list
published, pointing out that even if a list is published, it would never
be the authentic one.
-TheNation
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