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Nigeria ‘to decide’ on MTN’s fine after court case
Nigeria ‘to decide’ on MTN’s fine after court case
CuteNaija
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Wednesday, December 23, 2015
Nigerian authorities will wait for the outcome of a court case filed by South African telecoms firm MTN before deciding on whether to enforce a $3.9 billion fine, a spokesman for the telecommunications ministry said.
The ministry spokesman contradicted a source in the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), who earlier said “appropriate action” would be taken against MTN if it failed to pay the fine by a December 31 deadline for failing to disconnect users with unregistered SIM cards.
Nigeria has been trying to halt the widespread use of unregistered SIM cards amid worries these are being used for criminal activity, including by Boko Haram sect.
The NCC slapped a $5.2 billion fine on MTN in October but after weeks of negotiations reduced it by 25 percent this month, setting a deadline for December 31, Reuters reported.
However, the operator was still not prepared to pay the reduced fine and said last week it would challenge the penalty in a Lagos court.
“The federal government, NCC (regulator) or any government agent will not do anything at the expiration of the December 31 deadline,” said Victor Oluwadamilare, the ministry’s media assistant.
“Now that they (MTN) have gone to court we will await the outcome of the case,” he added. “This is a government that believes in the rule of law.”
The ministry appears to have taken a softer stance than the regulator on the dispute.
The minister Adebayo Shittu told Reuters last month Nigeria did not want MTN to “to die” from the fine. Click to signup for FREE news updates, latest information and hottest gists everyday
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"The minister Adebayo Shittu told Reuters last month Nigeria did not want MTN to “to die” from the fine".
ReplyDeleteI agree with the minister. Punishment is meant to correct not to kill.
MTN would not have gone to court if the fine is affordable.
I will suggest NCC reduces the fine reasonably and MTN should settle out of court.