Saturday 31 August 2013

Dar City Council pulls out of Uda

         

                                                                      Uda vehicles 

By Mkinga Mkinga, The Citizen Reporter  (email the author)

Posted  Saturday, August 31  2013 at  07:53
In Summary
In an exclusive interview with The Citizen on Saturday, his lordship mayor Dr Didas Masaburi, said that at last week’s extraordinary full council meeting, the Dar es Salaam City Council reached the decision by following all procedures.


Dar es Salaam. Dar es Salaam City Council (DCC) has pulled out of the troubled Shirika la Usafiri Dar es Salaam (UDA) as it’s now eying to run the Dar es Salaam Rapid Transport (DART), this paper can authoritatively report.
In an exclusive interview with The Citizen on Saturday, his lordship mayor Dr Didas Masaburi, said that at last week’s extraordinary full council meeting, the Dar es Salaam City Council reached the decision by following all procedures.
“Our meeting principally agreed to pull out of the management and running UDA by selling all our shares, according to law, but the market price will be the top consideration,” Dr Masaburi noted.
UDA, whose evaluation was conducted in 2009 by Dar es Salaam-based Land & Property Consultants, has 120 permanent employees, a fleet of 20 buses, land and buildings, office furniture, equipment and machinery worth billions of shillings.
The mayor said among many issues that were approved by the council’s meeting is that the investor Simon Group should pay more for the unalocated shares at the current market price, which according to the evaluation conducted by KPMG is sh1,618 while the investor bought shares at sh145.
“All shareholders, Dar City Council, Treasury registrar and Simon Group had agreed to find an independent organization to evaluate shares and established that each share was supposed to be sold at Sh1618,” he said.
Reached for comments yesterday, acting Treasury registrar Mr Elias Mwakibinga said the government is also set to leave and sell its UDA shares after the endorsement of the Cabinet.
“The government policy is to pull out from any business….that is why we want to leave UDA. That was the reason why the government in 1974 released about 51 per cent stake to Dar es Salaam City Council,” Mr Mwakibinga said.
Mr Mwakibinga said when the cabinet approves that idea of leaving UDA alone then Consolidated Holdings Corporation (CHC) will take over the process of selling the government shares as the law stipulates when it comes to privitising government entities.
He said the idea of selling shares also needs to have an investor who has financial muscle. Mr Mwakibinga said the firm needs massive investment to revive its services and meet the standards.
However, Dr Masaburi said the Dar es Salaam City Councilors are set to meet the Parliamentary Committee on Regional Administration and Local Government next Sunday to express their intention to pull and out among many other issues.
“We are looking forward to meeting Dr Kigwangala’s committee this coming Sunday to express our concern over pulling out from UDA….there is no way we can manage to run the company which owes about sh17 billion,” Dr Masaburi said

In his comments on Tuesday, the investor in UDA, Simon Group, Mr Robert Kisena remarked:
“Simon Group has invested billions of shilling to enable the company run…so how could we pay for the shares? I think what we have injected is even higher than what we should top up for the shares we bought,” Mr Kisena said.

source: The citizen