MTN $3.9bn fine: Former US attorney-general to the rescue
| Eric Holder |
Telecommunications giant, MTN, has intensified efforts to
ward off a $3.9 billion fine by the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC)
for failing to disconnect unregistered SIM cards, by hiring a former US
Attorney-General Eric Holder to negotiate the fine imposed last year.
The NCC had fined the MTN $5.2 billion for its failure to
disconnect 5.2 million unregistered subscribers on its network by the August
2015 deadline and asked it to pay up by November 16, 2015. However, the fine
was reviewed downwards by 25 per cent with a fresh payment deadline of December
31, 2015 after appeals by the company.
But rather than pay the reviewed fine, MTN approached the
Federal High Court sitting in Lagos a few days to the payment deadline,
challenging the legality of the fine. By the time the matter came up for
hearing in January, the telecoms company through its counsel, Chief Wole
Olanipekun (SAN), sought an out-of-court settlement and requested a 60-day
window to sort things out with the NCC.
The court obliged him in part, adjourning the matter till
March 28, 2016.
According to the Financial Times of London, the MTN might
have finally settled for former US Attorney-General Holder to help it negotiate
the fine, put at 95 per cent of its annual turnover in Nigeria, because of his
experience in handling such matters.
Holder was one of President Barack Obama’s longest serving
cabinet members. He held office from 2009 to 2015 before returning to
Washington-based corporate law firm Covington and Burling after standing down
as attorney-general in April 2015.
“His experience as attorney-general in dealing with
corporates with a lot of problems was interesting to MTN,” the paper quoted
someone close to the negotiations, adding that the telecom company hoped his
“experience and stature could inject some balance into the equation”.
As US attorney-general, Holder presided over the biggest
corporate settlements in US history. These included the $13 billion that
JPMorgan Chase paid over the sale of mortgage-backed securities before the
financial crisis, and BP’s $18 billion fine for the Horizon oil spill.
The MTN fine is much larger than those handled by Holder in
the US but it hopes that he would be able to help it make a head way in its
attempt to get better deal away from the current $3.9 billion which threatens
to wipe off 95 per cent of its annual earnings from its largest market with 62
million subscribers, representing 42 per cent of the group’s network.
Holder reportedly set to work with an initial visit to Abuja
last month to plead with senior government officials on behalf of the telecoms
company but had apparently not been able to find favours with the regulatory
authority contending that the fine was computed strictly according to the
regulations set out in 2011.
The MTN appeals had been falling on deaf ears, according to
the NCC sources, because the telecom company had acted in contempt of the
regulatory authority’s several warnings about the dire consequence of its
failure to disconnect unregistered sims by the August 25, 2015 deadline.
NCC sources also said MTN failed to respond to warnings about
how unregistered sim cards were used by criminals and Boko Haram terrorists to
evade surveillance. Security chiefs had been particularly incensed, they said,
when a terrorist commander was captured with dozens of MTN SIM cards after the
deadline set last August for all telecom groups to disconnect unregistered
subscribers.
“At first there were lots of people who said this was a bad
signal for foreign investors but when they looked into it they realised that
MTN had really messed up,” an official said.
The Executive Vice-Chairman of NCC, Umar Danbatta, had
allayed fears that the fine was punitive enough to scare away foreign investors
when he said the penalty was open to favourable review. This might have
encouraged the MTN to review its court option in favour of the engagement of a
negotiator of Holder’s status to help it find a soft landing.
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