MTN gets respite over $5.2bn fine
AFP
South African telecoms giant MTN has won
a respite on the payment of a massive $5.2 billion fine imposed on the
company in Nigeria to allow for negotiations, the mobile phone operator
said Monday.
The Nigerian Communications Commission
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 that 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 the
executive chairman of the company, Mr 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, without prejudice, 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”
before the company announced it had been hit by the fine.
The probe could result in South Africa’s bourse operator slapping MTN with another hefty penalty or result in criminal charges.
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