
The Director General of the Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE), Alex
Okoh has commended Skyway Aviation Handling Company Limited (SAHCOL)
when he visited the company at the Murtala Muhammed Airport, Lagos as
part of the bureau’s post privatisation monitoring programme.
Okoh, who was accompanied on the visit
by the BPE Director of Capital Market, Baba Mohammed, was received by
the Managing Director of SAHCOL, Rizwan Kadri, and the Management staff
at the company’s headquarters on Wednesday.
He explained that the purpose of the
visit was to commend SAHCOL for a job well done so far, and to seek
whether it is ripe to give SAHCOL a clean bill of health, in order to
present a discharge certificate to the company, so as to be completely
off the monitoring of BPE.
The Director-General, revealed that
SAHCOL was one of their success stories so far, and hence would want to
understand the dynamics behind the success, and perhaps be able to
replicate it in BPE’s future privatisation and transactions.
“Essentially we want you to know that we are quite pleased with the
progress SAHCOL has made so far, which goes to justify the principles of
privatisation,” Okoh said.
He explained that the federal government
to show its support for privatisation, enacted a law in 1999, known as
the Public Enterprise Act, to identify certain government enterprises
which needed to be privatised and handed over to the private sector.
This, according to him, was to ensure
that the efficiency of the services rendered by these enterprises are
improved upon, and also to stop the bleeding in terms of the pressure
that these enterprise that were not fully efficient were putting on the
treasury of the federation.
In addition, he said the transaction
method observed and chosen for the privatisation of SAHCOL was full
privatisation, so as to heighten the level of services rendered, given
the international benchmark, but in some of the other enterprise sold,
government has held some stake essentially in order to direct the
strategic services that are provided to the public space.
Reinforcing the essence of his visit to SAHCOL, Okoh emphasised that what BPE tried to do, especially for the fully privatised companies like SAHCOL “is to keep monitoring the performances of the level of services rendered, given the international best practices that have to be met, to ensure that they meet the critical objectives of privatisation in the first place.”
Reinforcing the essence of his visit to SAHCOL, Okoh emphasised that what BPE tried to do, especially for the fully privatised companies like SAHCOL “is to keep monitoring the performances of the level of services rendered, given the international best practices that have to be met, to ensure that they meet the critical objectives of privatisation in the first place.”
0 comments:
Post a Comment