Nigerian
minister tells MTN to drop lawsuit over fine
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[January 26, 2016]
By Julia Payne
ABUJA (Reuters) - South African cellphone
operator MTN should drop its legal action over a $3.9 billion fine
imposed in Nigeria to help facilitate talks on a possible settlement,
the Nigerian telecommunications minister said on Tuesday.
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The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) slapped a $5.2 billion
fine on MTN in October for failing to disconnect users with
unregistered SIM cards but after weeks of negotiations reduced it by
25 percent.
MTN, which makes about 37 percent of its revenue from Nigeria, then
filed a suit in the West African country questioning NCC's legal
grounds for imposing the penalty.
"I'm not aware of any out-of-the-court settlement," telecoms
minister Adebayo Shittu told reporters.
Shittu said President Muhammadu Buhari will have the final decision
on the matter, adding that MTN might be advised to withdraw the
court case filed against the fine.
"If they withdraw it creates a better environment, an environment
where there is no stress or pressure on either side," he said.
A judge in Lagos, Nigeria's commercial capital, last week gave the
company until March 18 to try to reach a settlement with the
Nigerian authorities over the fine. The prospect of a lower fine
boosted MTN shares. [nL8N15622A]
The fine equates to more than twice MTN's annual average capital
spending over the past five years.
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Nigeria has been trying to halt the widespread use of unregistered
SIM cards amid worries these are being used for criminal activity,
including by the militant Islamist group Boko Haram.
(Writing by Ulf Laessing and Chijioke Ohuocha; Editing by Kevin
Liffey and Keith Weir)
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