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AMCON, BRIPAN, CAC to improve insolvency practice, licensing in Nigeria

*The Business Recovery and Insolvency Practitioners Association of Nigeria has met with the Management of Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON) on improving the insolvency practice and licensing in the country

Alexander Davis | ConsumerConnect

The Business Recovery and Insolvency Practitioners Association of Nigeria (BRIPAN), on Monday, met with the management of Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON) on improving the insolvency practice and licensing in the country.

Ayodele Akintunde, President of BRIPAN, SAN, who led the delegation to AMCON office in Abuja, said the agency had done a good job in trying to stabilise the banking system by ensuring that debts are taken care of, NAN report said.

“The debt recovery regime in Nigeria is still a work in progress such that law reform, training and necessary support are needed to ensure that recovery of debt and sales of assets are easily achievable,” Akintunde said.

He als noted that the visit was to partner with the agency towards improving the insolvency practice and business rescue mechanism available in Nigeria.

Akintunde said it was also to improve the training of insolvency practitioners.

Ahmed Kuru, Managing Director of AMCON, said that the corporation had recovered a debt of N1 trillion since inception “and has anchored a lot of businesses that are presently running.”

Kuru said that the corporation had resolved more than four to five thousand business relationships.

AMCON Chief also explained that the organisation is not a hospital where if businesses fail, you just walk in and AMCON takes over.

According to him, that is a very wrong impression of the corporation.

“We don’t take, have not taken and will not take any case like that. AMCON is still battling with the ones taken during the global financial crisis.

“AMCON is created to buy non-performing loans, resuscitate the non-performing loans even though some of these non-performing loans have been with these banks for more than 10 to 15 years before being transferred to AMCON.

“AMCON has been able to resolve quite a lot of those transactions and in doing that, it has recovered a lot of funds,” he said.

Also in a visit to the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC), Akintunde said the essence was to engage with the Registrar-General and his executive team to explore further areas of cooperation.

“As you all know, CAC is a regulator of insolvency practice in Nigeria.

“And as the leading provider of insolvency training and certification in Nigeria, we have come to have a useful discussion with the registrar-general about improving the practice of insolvency, improving the licensing of insolvency, improving training and capacity building even within the CAC and among practitioners,” he said.

In his response, Alhaji Garba Abubakar, Registrar-General of CAC, who welcomed the delegation, assured of his support for the association in the improvement of insolvency regime in the West African country.

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