MTN Group will lobby for further reductions to a fine imposed by Nigeria, a source familiar with the matter said, after authorities in its biggest market cut the penalty by more than a third on Thursday to $3.4 billion, Reuters reports.
The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) handed Africa’s biggest mobile phone company a $5.2 billion penalty in October after MTN failed to cut off users with unregistered SIM cards from its network.
The country has been pushing telecoms firms to verify the identity of subscribers amid worries unregistered SIM cards were being used for criminal activity, especially considering the on-going Boko Haram insurgency in the north.
The NCC reduced the fine after five weeks of talks involving government and MTN officials, and gave MTN until the end of the year to pay it, said MTN, which is based in South Africa.
But the reduced fine, if enforced, is still more than two times MTN’s average yearly capital expenditure of about $1.5 billion over the last five years.
“The fine is still big enough to cripple MTN’s ability to invest in its network and that’s what further talks with the NCC are about,” said one source, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Shares in MTN, which have fallen about 20 percent since the fine was first announced on Oct. 26, closed down 4.6 percent.
MTN Group spokesman Chris Maroleng declined to comment beyond the company’s statement, in which MTN said it was considering the NCC decision.
“Executive Chairman Phuthuma Nhleko will immediately and urgently re-engage with the Nigerian authorities before responding formally,” it said.
Nhleko, who took charge for up to six months after the abrupt resignation last month of Sifiso Dabengwa, led the company for nine years before stepping down in 2011.
“I suspect that this is not a closed book,” said Sasha Naryshkine, a fund manager at Vestact in Johannesburg. “(Nhleko) will no doubt be working harder to look for another reduction.”
The fine came months after Muhammadu Buhari came to power , after a campaign in which he promised tougher regulation and a fight against corruption.
An NCC source told Reuters the decision to reduce the fine was taken by President Buhari’s office, which passed on the information to the NCC late on Wednesday.
Some analysts have said the size of the fine risked damaging Nigeria’s efforts to shake off its image as a risky frontier market for international investors. Others said the fine showed Abuja was keen to enforce the law.
Separately, MTN announced a shake-up of its senior management structure in an effort to strengthen oversight, governance and regulatory compliance across its operations in 22 countries in Africa and the Middle East.
MTN, which has drawn criticism from investors and analysts for its handling of the matter, also announced a review of its global operations. It added that the chief executive of its Nigerian operations, Michael Ikpoki, and the Nigeria head of regulatory and corporate affairs, Akinwale Goodluck, had resigned with immediate effect.
Ikpoki was replaced by Ferdi Moolman, who was previously chief financial officer in Nigeria.



