LAGOS, Nigeria
(AP) — Africa's biggest telecommunications company is locked in a nasty battle
in powerful Nigeria, with billions of dollars at stake.
The fine amounts to
nearly two years' profits for MTN Nigeria, by far the company's most profitable
subsidiary. It also equals nearly a quarter the national budget of Nigeria,
which has been hammered by the global plunge in oil prices. Nigeria is Africa's
biggest oil producer and President Muhammadu Buhari, who was elected this year,
says he inherited depleted coffers as he struggles to create jobs and fulfill
other campaign promises.
In a telephone
interview Thursday with The Associated Press, Tony Ojobo, the spokesman for the
Nigerian Communications Commission, said the regulator won't buckle to pressure
from MTN shareholders to reduce the fine levied against the South African-based
telecommunications giant.
Underscoring the
perceived reliance on mobile phones by Islamic extremists in Nigeria's war, the
military regularly cuts cellphone service in areas under attack by Boko Haram.
Unregistered mobile phones can also be used by criminals to hide their tracks.
Ojobo said unregistered
MTN SIM cards were used to make calls demanding ransom in the September
kidnapping of former Finance Minister Olu Falae.…
Institutional
shareholders in MTN, the biggest telecommunications company in Africa, have
complained that the huge fine is punitive, and warned it could hurt investor
confidence in Nigeria, Africa's most populous nation of about 170 million
people.
South Africa's Public
Investment Corporation, MTN's biggest shareholder with more than 15 percent of
shares, said Tuesday it is concerned about the fine and allegations that MTN
did not immediately disclose it to shareholders, according to Daniel Matjila,
CEO of Public Investment Corporation. The Johannesburg Stock Exchange is
investigating.
Ojobo said Nigeria's
four cellphone service providers signed an agreement that set the fine at
200,000 naira (about $1,000) for each unregulated SIM card in 2011. He said MTN
was the only company not to comply and that the 5.2 million cards were actually
deactivated by the regulator. Until a couple of years ago, people could buy SIM
cards without producing identity documents. The regulations are aimed at
helping law enforcement and security forces to track criminals.
Ojobo even said
"there is an orchestration to try to blackmail the regulator,"
without offering details.
"MTN should
operate in the rule of law — the same rule of law that protects ...
investment," he told AP. He added that in South Africa, MTN has ensured 98
percent compliance in registering its SIM card holders.…
In Johannesburg, MTN
spokesman Chris Maroleng said the company is above board in its dealings with
Nigeria.
"MTN is committed
to engaging with authorities in Nigeria ... (adhering) to the highest
principles of sound corporate governance and transparency," Maroleng said.
Nigerian Vice President
Yemi Osinbajo late Thursday denied that he is heading the Nigerian team
negotiating with MTN executives from South Africa, as the AP erroneously
reported. His spokesman Laolu Akande said local reports to that effect were
planted. It is said that the Vice President is not involved in the MTN negotiation
about the fine..
South Africa needs to
intervene diplomatically, said Azwimpheleli Langalanga, a researcher at the
South African Institute of International Affairs.
"MTN is a big
player. It's a strategic company in South Africa, and it's big in
Nigeria," he said. "It's an embarrassment to South Africa that MTN
was found wanting in Nigeria."
South Africa's Minister
in the Presidency Jeff Radebe told journalists the issue is between MTN and the
Nigerian authority.
"Obviously, as
government, we are concerned about this matter so we do hope that those talks
between MTN and the Nigerian authorities will bear fruit," he said.
Despite the furor, the regulating authority in Nigeria agreed this
week to extend MTN Nigeria's operating license until 2021 for $94.2 million.
MTN shares gained 5 percent on Tuesday's news after losing nearly a quarter of
their value over the fine.
MTN operates in 22 countries in Africa and the Middle East and
reports having 233 million subscribers, more than 60 million of them in
Nigeria.
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