<img src="http://ift.tt/2mblrkZ" alt="" width="640" height="360" class="alignleft size-full wp-image-247949" srcset="http://ift.tt/2mblrkZ 640w,http://ift.tt/2mCR6cn 320w,http://ift.tt/2mblmh2 281w,http://ift.tt/2mCISRg 562w,http://ift.tt/2mblsp3 531w,http://ift.tt/2mCEYrT 1062w,http://ift.tt/2mbdMD8 487w,http://ift.tt/2mCR58j 600w" sizes="(max-width: 640px) 100vw, 640px"https://cdn.gdn.ng/, Sokoto Furniture was one of the largest furniture companies in the North, employing more than 10,000 workers and serving clients from as far as neighbouring Niger Republic.
Conducting the visiting investors round the factory, Managing Director of Sokoto Investment Company, Aliyu Bala Sokoto, said government is determined to bring the company back to its former glory.
“We are talking with the Turkish investors, under the auspices of the MUSIAD Group, with a view to collaborating in various sectors. Apart from our understanding on the furniture company, we are also working on establishment of a light tractor and agricultural implements assembly plant as well technical partnership on women empowerment through skills transfer,” he said in a statement made available to The Guardian.
Team Leader of the MUSIAD Group, Resul Aslan, said a comprehensive report on the status of the company will soon be presented.He said his Group is delighted with the collaboration, and expressed optimism that the factory will soon return to full production.
Though important to Sokoto economy in the 80s and 90s, a downturn in the fortune of the Sokoto Furniture Company led to its closure and despite provision of loan by the Asset Management Company of Nigeria (AMCON) in efforts to revive it, not much was achieved.
Governor Aminu Waziri Tambuwal Tambuwal in 2015 cleared the N1.5 billion AMCON debt and took back possession of the company, with a promise to revive it in partnership with private partners.
Vía The Guardian Nigeria http://ift.tt/2m5xSOy
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