ntel Set For A Comeback In 2026 With Strong Leadership Team

ntel Set For A Comeback In 2026 With Strong Leadership Team


LAGOS – NatCom Development and Investment Ltd (trading as Ntel), the company that acquired Nigeria’s defunct national carrier NITEL, is preparing a commercial relaunch in January 2026, marking the comeback of one of Nigeria’s telecom giants.

The Chief Executive Officer of ntel, Soji Maurice-Diya, confirmed that the once-dormant Nigerian tele­coms brand will officially re-enter the nation’s telecommunications market in the first quarter of 2026, under a renewed strategy that positions it as a “digital-first, infrastructure-light MVNO focused on innovation, inclu­sion, and sustainability.”

According to a Tech News platform, Technology Times, the disclosure came last week during the latest edi­tion of the Technology Times Thought Leadership Series, a platform that con­venes decision-makers shaping Nige­ria’s digital transformation to share insights, foresight, and lessons from the frontlines of technology and poli­cy innovation.

Maurice-Diya, who leads NatCom Development & Investment Limited (trading as ntel), said the company’s re-entry marks “the beginning of a new chapter not just for ntel, but for Ni­geria’s telecoms industry as a whole.”

He explained that the relaunch will embody a leaner, smarter, and innova­tion-driven approach that leverages digital platforms, partnerships, and policy opportunities to serve under­served and value-conscious segments of the market.

“We are not returning to be anoth­er operator chasing millions of sub­scribers,” Maurice-Diya said. “We are coming back to serve a new generation of Nigerians who value innovation, efficiency, and authenticity in their digital experience. Our comeback will be defined by focus, speed, and value creation.”

Maurice-Diya also called for more predictable spectrum management policies, flexible infrastructure-sharing frameworks, and incentives for small­er operators and virtual networks to thrive in niche segments without the burden of legacy infrastructure costs.

Nigeria’s broadband penetration continues to expand, but unevenly. While urban centres enjoy multiple layers of connectivity, rural and un­derserved regions still lag behind. Maurice-Diya identified this as both a challenge and an opportunity for inno­vation-driven operators like ntel.

“We must power digital inclusion with sustainability, not subsidy,” he asserted. “The rural opportunity is immense—but to unlock it, we need smarter, more localised models of broadband delivery.”

Detailing ntel’s re-entry strategy, Maurice-Diya revealed that the com­pany will operate a mobile virtual net­work operator (MVNO) model—an “in­frastructure-light, innovation-heavy” approach that prioritises digital ser­vice delivery, speed to market, and customer experience.

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Source: Independent

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