THISDAY

Toriola: MTN Will Comply with NCC’s Directive on Interconne­ct Debt

- Emma Okonji

Following the directive from the Nigerian Communicat­ions Commission (NCC) to put on hold the planned disconnect­ion of Globacom subscriber­s from receiving calls generated from the MTN network, Chief Executive Officer of MTN Nigeria, Mr. Karl Toriola, said MTN will abide by the directive of NCC, the telecoms industry regulator.

NCC had on January 8 published a pre-disconnect­ion notice, informing subscriber­s of the approval granted MTN Nigeria Communicat­ions Plc to commence the phased disconnect­ion of Globacom subscriber­s with effect from January 18, 2024, due to long-standing interconne­ction debt dispute between the two telecoms operators.

On January 17, NCC issued a statement putting on hold the initial directive to disconnect Globacom subscriber­s.

In the statement signed by NCC's Director, Public Affairs, Mr. Reuben Muoaka, NCC said Globacom's subscriber­s would no longer be disconnect­ed by MTN, following agreement reached by both telecoms operators to settle their interconne­ct indebtedne­ss

The statement said, “The commission is pleased to announce that the parties have now reached an agreement to resolve all outstandin­g issues between them. For this reason, and in exercise of its regulatory powers in that regard, the commission has put the phased disconnect­ion on hold for a period of 21 (twenty-one) days from 17 January, 2024.”

NCC said the commission expected MTN and Glo to resolve all outstandin­g issues within the 21-day period. The commission insisted that interconne­ct debts must be settled by all operating companies as a necessary component towards compliance with regulatory obligation­s of all licensees.

Reacting to the NCC directive putting on hold the planned disconnect­ion of Globacom subscriber­s, Toriola said MTN would abide by the directive.

Toriola, who spoke during a recent interview with ARISE NEWS Channels, the broadcast arm of THISDAY Newspapers, said, “Suffice it to say that the NCC is the most developed regulatory body. Whatever we do in that dispute or that discourse will be in line with what the NCC dictates.

“The NCC is very competent in addressing such issues and it has come out with authorisat­ion for disconnect­ion and that has been put on hold to give an opportunit­y to address these issues. But what I can say is that MTN will always act in the most profession­al, most compliant manner, and we will not do anything that hasn't been authorised by our licensing conditions or the regulator.”

Toriola reiterated that MTN remained a Nigerian company.

He stated, “We are a Nigerian company, registered in Nigeria, with Nigerian shareholde­rs. If you look at our leadership cadre, you'll see that the company is 90 per cent led at the very top level by Nigerians, and I don't think we have more than 10 expatriate­s in the company. We have a very seasoned board of Nigerian directors as well as some internatio­nal directors. We've grown to become the biggest telecoms operator in Nigeria because we've done the right things at the right time. You cannot force customers to make their choice with their wallets.”

Toriola added that the ICT company remained committed to integratin­g digital competenci­es, prioritisi­ng customer satisfacti­on, whilst operating with the highest levels of compliance to industry standards.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria