NEWSTOP STORY

FG to shut down NERFUND over N17.5bn bad loans

The Federal Government is making arrangements to shut down the operations of the National Economic Reconstruction Fund (NERFUND) at the end of October due to huge non-performing loans of about N17.5 billion.
A competent source at the Federal Ministry of Finance told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Thursday in Abuja that a committee had already been formed to ensure smooth liquidation of the company.
The source said that the committee was expected to come up with recommendations concerning the welfare of the NERFUND workers and also what to do with the office equipment.
The committee was also expected to recommend an agency that would handle the numerous pending court cases initiated by NERFUND to repatriate billions of naira it had earlier loaned out.
It said that the committee was expected to submit recommendations to the Minister of Finance on Thursday.
According to the source, about 1,143 projects in the Small and Medium Enterprises sector were financed with the NERFUND loans between 2010 and 2013.
The source said that NERFUND currently had problems recovering the loans, adding that out of N17.5 billion, about N14.2 billion representing 80 per cent was borrowed by a few people.
He said the ratio of non-performing loans was high because many of the loans were not collateralised.
Meanwhile, a member of staff of the Fund, who preferred anonymity, told NAN that all workers of the oraganisation had been officially informed about the wind up.
“We have been given the choice to either resign or be sacked. The managing director told us the management is working with the permanent secretary of the Federal Ministry of Finance.
“They have promised that at the end of the day, we will not be jobless. They will place us somewhere else, so we are expectant,” the source said.
NERFUND was established by Decree No. 2 of 1989 (now an Act) to act as a catalyst towards the stimulation of the rapid rise of real production enterprises in the country with a seed capital of N300 million.
In 2002, the Federal Government merged Nigeria Industrial Development Bank (NIDB) and Nigeria Bank of Commerce and Industry (NBCI) to form Bank of Industry (BOI) but excluded NERFUND from the fusion of all development finance institutions (DFIs).
However, the agency’s capital had grown into billions of naira but due to poor management, the organisation had been in comatose since late 2013, losing its capacity to carry out its mandate.
In June 2016, its staff took to the streets to protest an alleged mismanagement of the agency’s funds by its administration.
The Federal Government, through the Minister of Finance, Kemi Adeosun, intervened by first shutting down the agency following the failure of the agency to reconcile the differences between the executive management and the entire staff, to forestall a further breakdown of law and order.
About two weeks after the shutdown, Adeosun officially instructed staff to return to work and appointed Dr Ezekiel Oseni in August of the same year, to act as Managing Director.
Just one year into his appointment, the Federal Government finally approved the winding up of the agency.
Contacted over the issue, the Deputy Director of Information, Federal Ministry of Finance, Mrs Patricia Deworitshe, said: “It is news to me. I don’t know if NERFUND is winding up.”
Similarly, efforts to obtain comments from the Managing Director of the organisation, Dr Ezekiel Oseni, proved abortive as calls made to his phone by a NAN correspondent were not picked while a text message sent to him over the issue was not replied.
Credit: News Agency of Nigeria (NAN)