BCN-24 Nigeria adopts softer tone on MTN

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ZCZC

BCN-24

NIGERIA-SAFRICA-TELECOM-TAXATION

Nigeria adopts softer tone on MTN

ABUJA, Sept 27, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Nigeria appears to have taken a softer
stance on Africa’s leading mobile operator MTN, assuring stakeholders that a
dispute over the repatriation of $8.13 billion in dividends will be
“resolved”.

Talking to reporters in Abuja following a monetary policy committee
meeting on Tuesday, Nigeria’s central bank governor Godwin Emefiele said
“we’ll resolve the matter.”

“Everyone will be happy,” Emefiele was quoted as saying by Bloomberg News.

In August, Nigeria shocked South Africa’s MTN and foreign investors when
it ordered the telecoms giant to pay back $8.13 billion (6.96 billion euros)
that it allegedly illegally took out of the country, and fined four banks
involved in the transfer.

Days later, in early September, President Muhammadu Buhari’s attorney
general followed up with another $2 billion tax fine.

With the economy still fragile after a deep recession in 2016 and
elections looming early next year, many private sector players in Nigeria
believe the move could dent investor sentiment.

During the monetary policy committee meeting, Emefiele warned that
Nigeria’s “exit from recession may be under threat” with the economy slowing
to 1.5 per cent in the second quarter of 2018.

It is not the first time MTN has been sanctioned by the Nigerian
authorities.

In 2015, MTN was fined $5.2 billion by Nigeria’s telecoms regulator NCC
for failing to disconnect unregistered SIM cards on its network.

The fine was later reduced to $1.7 billion after a series of negotiations
with the Nigerian government.

BSS/AFP/HR/1020