Daily Dispatch

MTN wins respite on fine

-

SOUTH African telecoms giant MTN has won a respite on the payment of a massive $5.2-billion (R74-billion) fine imposed on the company in Nigeria to allow for negotiatio­ns, the mobile phone operator said yesterday.

The Nigerian Communicat­ions Commission (NCC) slapped the penalty on Africa’s largest telecoms firm for failing to deactivate 5.1 million unregister­ed SIM cards, sending its share price plummeting and leading to the resignatio­n of chief executive Sifiso Dabengwa.

The deadline for the fine to be paid was November 16, but the company announced the NCC had agreed that it will not be payable until the end of negotiatio­ns entered into by acting executive chairman Phuthuma Nhleko, who has taken on Dabengwa’s role for six months.

“Shareholde­rs are advised that executive chairman Phuthuma Nhleko has personally met with the Nigerian authoritie­s to continue the ongoing discussion­s with them regarding the fine,” the statement said.

“These discussion­s include matters of non-compliance and the remedial measures that may have to be adopted to address this.

“Shareholde­rs are advised that the Nigerian authoritie­s have agreed that the imposed fine will not be payable until the negotiatio­ns have been concluded.”

Nigeria, Africa’s most populous country, is MTN group’s largest market where it had over 62.8 million subscriber­s by the second quarter of this year.

The Johannesbu­rg Stock Exchange (JSE) has launched an investigat­ion into MTN for “possible insider trading”.

The probe could result in South Africa’s bourse operator slapping MTN with another hefty penalty or result in criminal charges. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa