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Over 40 years after, Nigeria to pay another N350b as 11 bid for Ajaokuta Steel Company (+Video)

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After more than 40 years, 10 administrations – five military and five civilians – and billions of foreign and local currencies, the Nigerian government is to pay yet another N350 billion ($496 million) in judgment debt to get the massive Ajaokuta Steel Complex off the ground for full production.

But first, one of 11 bidding business concerns has to be chosen to run the complex, the Mines and Steel Development Minister Olamilekan Adegbite, has said.

Adegbite said on Thursday, while presenting his ministry’s achievements at the 9th edition of the PMB Scorecard series, organised by the Ministry of Information and Culture that the present administration had resolved all legal issues with the steel company and was in the process of selling it to a competent bidder.

“The concession of Ajaokuta Steel Company to Global Steel by then-President Olusegun Obasanjo in 2005 resulted in litigation and a $7 billion demand by Global Steel.

“Things went sour and they took us to court. The court case went on for about 12 years, but thanks to a patriotic Nigerian lawyer in the UK who handled the case very effectively,” Mr Adegbite explained.

“Global Steel came with a demand of seven billion dollars, but our lawyer was able to puncture holes in their case and at the end, they had to settle for 496 million dollars.”

Adegbite was of the opinion that

According to the minister, the Buhari regime had plans to make Ajaokuta Steel Company functional before the end of 2022, but for the outbreak of COVID-19 pandemic.

He, however, said that the government was still committed to ensuring that the company was concessioned to a competent bidder with technical and financial capacities to optimise its potential.

“We were supposed to make the plant work in 2022. One of the presidential mandates was to resolve all contending issues on Ajaokuta.

In 2019, at the Russian-Africa summit in Moscow, President Muhammadu Buhari discussed the idea of resuscitating Ajaokuta with President Vladimir Putin.

“An agreement was reached for Russian engineers to come in for a technical audit by March 2020.

“But the emergence of the first and second waves of COVID-19 stalled the plan.

“We hope that we can give Ajaokuta to a company, not just on concession basis, but on equity participation,” he said.

He said that out of the 11 companies bidding, three were Russian.

We are talking of companies who intend to bring their own monies into Ajaokuta to make sure that it works.

“The plant is still good if we put in the right amount of capital, it will start producing in less than two years.

“Government has employed a transaction adviser who will guide us through the process,” he said

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