THE management of Alheri Engineering Company Limited has denied owing Federal Government the sum of $75.5 million (about N27.18 billion) over fibre optic agreement.

The company , in a statement on Monday, described the accusation as wrong and fallacious and assured its customers that the story is “…not only untrue but a distortion of facts and events twisted to achieve a predetermined goal. The story is as bizarre as it is deceptive, calculated only to sensationalize and to smear the good corporate reputation and image of Alheri”

The company stated that after a very extensive and competitive bid selection process, it was shortlisted with Phase 3 as preferred bidders for the concession of the fiber optic deployment project under a Public Private Partnership (PPP) arrangement

  “The concession agreement required the Concessionaires to take over the operations of TCN’s fiber optic network, Design, Build, Finance and Operate (DBFO) the infrastructure with unhindered access to existing and future fiber optic infrastructure on the network. For the purpose of executing the project, the entire country was divided into two. The eastern half of the country awarded to Alheri and the western half to Phase3. It is worth to note that the concessioned area granted to Alheri covers less economic viable cities.” It stated.

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Despite the deployment, challenges as evidenced by TCN’s refusal to meet its obligations under the agreement, for example, by providing lines upon which Alheri is to build upon, the company revealed that it has expended huge capital outlay to carry out extensive expansion and upgrades on TCN’s telecommunications infrastructure but could not deploy fiber to the North which constitutes a significant market as “there is no line between Makurdi and Jos, which constitutes the bridge between the South and North.”

Revealing that a request by Alheri for timelines within which TCN intends to provide the requisite lines between Makurdi and Jos since 2011 has not been provided by TCN till date.

The company stated that despite Alheri’s serious challenges, and inheriting next to nothing on the infrastructure concessioned to it, it was still able to deploy a total of 1000km and installed state-of-art transmission equipment along these lines. …” Alheri inherited no lines from TCN. The concessioners have, therefore, expended far more than $100million as capital and operating expenditure on the project.”

Alheri’s management expressed surprise at the publication of TCN online and in some newspapers as Infrastructure Concession Regulatory Commission (ICRC) has already intervened to resolve the impasse, being the moderator in the resolution process and posited that the “unfounded allegation is the attempt by TCN to resist the restructuring of the concession fee due to the changes in the regulatory and market environment as suggested and recommended by SIAO, the auditors appointed to audit the Concession Agreement with specific terms of reference which included financial audit, technical audit, audit observation and recommendation, with the understanding that parties will be guided by the outcome of the Auditors’ report. The audit confirmed that prices on capacities for sale of transmission services on fiber per km dropped by about 89 per cent by 2015.