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Court nullifies Etisalata��s interim Board

From Mike Ojo, Lagos
The Federal High Court in Lagos has nullified the appointment of an interim board for Emerging Markets Telecommunications Service (EMTS), the fourth largest telecommunications service operator in Nigeria, and owners of Etisalat.
Justice Ibrahim Buba made the order over the weekend based on application by Spectrum Wireless Communication Ltd, which invested $35million in 2009 in EMTS/Etisalat.
He ruled: a�?An order is hereby granted discharging the ex-parte order made by this court in this suit in favour of the respondents on the 3rd day of July 2017.
a�?The order made pursuant to motion ex-parte dated 3rd day of July 2017 was a nullity, made without jurisdiction and obtained by misrepresentation of facts. Same be and is hereby discharged and vacated as prayed.
a�?The motion for stay is struck out having set aside the order. The respondent shall reverse all steps taken by it since the order was a nullitya�?.
The order nullifies the appointment of Dr Joseph Nnana of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) as chairman, Mr Boye Olusanya as Managing Director, Mrs Funke Ighodaro as Chief Financial Officer, Mr Seyi Bickersthet and Mr Ken Igbokwe on the board of EMTS.
The nullification follows the dismissal of the preliminary objection filed by United Capital Trustees Ltd in response to the application by Spectrum Wireless, a shareholder of EMTS.
Spectrum Wireless claimed that the order was obtained by misrepresentation of facts that alienated its interests in the company.
The interim board of EMTS, which has the support of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), had received bids from about five bidders in its intended sale of the company.
The sale was to be concluded by last December 31, but was recently moved to January 16.
EMTS), popularly known as Etisalat, secured a telecommunications licensee in 2007.
It has equity participation by local and foreign investors and in 2011, secured facilities from a consortium of domestic banks under the auspices of United Capital Trustees Ltd (United Capital) to the tune of N115.6billion and $235million.
EMTSa�� alleged that default to service the facilities elicited recovery action by United Capital.
The sensitivities of such action to the health of the Nigerian financial system, the telecommunications sector and the economy in general, precipitated tempered action with the consent of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) to avert possible adverse impacts.
There was anxiety in some quarters and fears that such action smacked of a takeover of the company by the government, a move that could bring undue preference to the company that could disrupt or distort competition that has been instrumental to the vibrancy of the telecommunications sector.
Following the exit of Etisalat and its directors in unclear circumstances in June 2017 from EMTS, United Capital initiated action and obtained an ex-parte order of July 3, 2017 to appoint a Transitional Board to superintend over the affairs of the company.
The Transitional Board rebranded the company as 9mobile and announced a bid for the sale of the company to interested investors.
The bid was intended to be concluded with handover of EMTS to the preferred or successful bidder by 31 December, 2017 but has since been extended to January 16, 2018.
Concerned that United Capitala��s action did not take their stake in EMTS into consideration, other (non-bank) investors in EMTS led by Spectrum Wireless, approached the court last December 2017 to challenge the ex-parte order granted in favour of United Capital.

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