The Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON) has said the top 20 debtors who owe over 67 per cent of the N5tn debt to AMCON deliberately refused to repay their debts because they consider their share of the “national cake. ”
Recall that the Chairman, AMCON, Muiz Banire, recently revealed that the corporation’s top 20 debtors owe 67 per cent of the N5tn debt owed his firm.
Speaking with newsmen last week, Head of Corporate Affairs, AMCON, Jude Nwauzor, said, “These 20 persons owe almost N4tn. We have several thousand accounts in our kitty and just like when you do your scale of preference, when we arrange it, there are top 20, 50, 100, and it moves on in that order.
“So what the chairman of AMCON talked about was that if we are able to resolve these 20, we would have done over 60 per cent of the total obligation, which, of course, is massive.
READ ALSO: Obiano reserves 60 per cent of CBN’s N4b grant for women
“We can only imagine what N5tn can do to a country where the government is borrowing to fund the budget.
“There are individuals in this country who hold on to this money and it is not that they don’t have the wherewithal to pay, but they just don’t want to pay because for them, it is national cake. But this is taxpayers’ money. Some workers have died because of these people. Some institutions have been crippled because of them. The economy is also suffering because of them.”
On why the corporation had not fully gone public to announce the debtors, Nwauzor stated that it was because some of them had cases with AMCON in court.
He said, “We are not just trying to identify these people; they are people we know and on several occasions, our chairman had at one point or the other mentioned their names.
“Most of these obligors are also in court with us, which is why you can’t just go out to reel out names, especially when you have a case that is before a court of competent jurisdiction.
“So, it is not that we are trying to shield the names, we know them but we need to be careful how we mention them, especially when they are undergoing hearings from the court.”
He said, “Some of these cases have been on for over five, seven years, and others since the inception of AMCON in 2010.
“So when you have exhausted all those options and the obligor or debtor is not bulging, then you seek redress in court and the court gives us the order to enforce on the asset of the obligor.
“It is through that court order that we’ll take over companies or to freeze the person’s account or assets. So it is not always cash; sometimes it comes in the form of cash, while other times it comes in the form of assets.”
On whether AMCON had received court approvals to go after the assets or cash of the top 20 defaulters, he replied, “Taking over a business or asset via the court is a process. It is not something that happens in one week or one year. But the court has been very helpful in this recovery effort, especially the Federal High Court.”