Tag: MTN

  • MTN confirms call logs between Justice Yunusa, Ricky Tarfa

    A FRAUD analyst working with MTN Communications, Mr. Adekunle Ogunbadejo, has confirmed to an Ikeja Special Offences Court the call logs between a judge of the Federal High Court, Justice Mohammed Yunusa and a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), Mr. Ricky Tarfa.

    Ogunbadejo, who is the first prosecution witness for the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), was being led in evidence by Mr. Wahab Shittu, the lead prosecuting counsel for the commission before Justice Sherifat Solebo.

    Justice Yunusa is facing a four-count of attempted perversion of the course of justice and corruption by a public official. Co-defendant and an employee with law firm of Ricky Tarfa (SAN), Esther Agbo, is facing a charge of offering gratification to a public official.

    During proceedings yesterday, Ogunbadejo told the court that call log contained the records of two numbers,  which belong to one Rickey Mustapha Tarfa and one Mohammed Nasir Yunusa.

    “There were several calls made between these numbers,” he said.

    Shittu’s attempt to make Ogunbadejo testify about his statement on oath made to the EFCC was, however, opposed by Justice Yunusa’s defence counsel, Chief Robert Clarke (SAN) and Agbo’s defence counsel Mr. John Odubela (SAN).

    Their objection was on the grounds that it was not served on their team as part of the proof of evidence, which should be forwarded to the defence.

    Justice Sherifat Solebo, while upholding the objection of the defence, said: “In view of the tardiness of the prosecution and lack of proof of service of the statement to the defence, it is hereby marked rejected.”

    Under cross-examination by Clarke, Ogunbadejo admitted that he was not privy to the content of the phone conversations between the judge and Mr. Rickey Tarfa (SAN).

    “We (MTN) do not give cloned sim cards; we do not keep records of verbal communications; we do not keep the content of text messages; and we are not privy to conversations between two parties,” the MTN fraud analyst said.

    The second prosecution witness and the Head of Regulatory Liaison at UBA, Mr. Robinson Imafidon, also told the court that in 2016, following the EFCC’s request, UBA provided the statement of the account of the judge to the anti-graft agency.

    “The owner of the account is Mohammed Nasir Yunusa,  on March 18, 2015 there was a transfer of N750,000 from one Joseph Nwobike, SAN and Co.

    “On May 14, 2015, there was a cash deposit into the account of N1.5million by one Agbo Esther,” he said.

    Under cross-examination by Clarke, Imafidon admitted that he was not aware of the purpose of the bank transaction.

    “I do not know the reason for the transfer by Esther Agbo,” Imafidon said.

    Earlier during proceedings, Justice Solebo, in a short ruling, admitted into evidence, a letter from MTN, which was certified by the EFCC.

    On July 4, the defence had opposed the admissibility of the letter on the grounds that the anti-graft agency could not certify a document from MTN.

    In the ruling, Justice Solebo noted that the letter, which certified the MTN call logs, was retrieved during investigations by the anti-graft agency.

  • MTN Gets Five New Awards in Nigeria

    MTN Nigeria was the biggest winner of the night at the 2nd edition of the Nigeria Tech Innovation & Telecom Awards (NTITA) held by the Instinct Wave and the Association of Telecom Companies of Nigeria (ATCON) recently in Lagos

    The ICT company carted five (5) awards – Telecom Company of the Year, Social Impact Award, Digital Transformation Award, Customer Experience Award and the Telcom CEO of the Year awards.

    Some of the awards won by MTN on the night Corporate Relations Executive, MTN Nigeria, Tobechukwu Okigbo, who was one of the executives present for the company, received the awards and expressed the organisation’s gratitude to the organisers and the independent judges.

    “We are honoured to not only receive these but to have been considered nominees in such lofty categories. MTN Nigeria has always and will continue to strive for excellence in all frontiers. Recognition for the work that thousands of us come together for every day is an incentive to do more, create more and be more.”

    The Group Chief Executive Officer of Instinct Wave, Akin Naphtal, explained that the prestigious award ceremony has quickly become the benchmark for outstanding performance and a symbol of excellence in leadership in the highly competitive technology industry.

    The award which is only in its second edition, fields judges formed from an independent panel of industry experts and recognises organisational performances products and services, innovations, corporate executives among other categories.

  • MTN shares up two per cent

    South Africa’s MTN Group shares rose as much as 2.55 per cent after the Nigerian central bank said it might reduce the $8.1 billion it had ordered the telecoms firm to repatriate to Nigeria.

    At the Johannesburg Stock Exchange on yesterday, MTN shares were up 2.03 per cent to 85.50 rand as early as 0837 GMT, due to the possibility of reducing the repatriation demand by MTN.

    MTN and the central bank are in a dispute over the transfer of $8.1 billion of funds which the bank said the company had sent abroad in breach of foreign-exchange regulations.

    Godwin Emefiele said on Sunday the CBN may reduce the amount it had ordered MTN Nigeria to repatriate.

    Emefiele said, while addressing reporters in London that new documents provided by the telecom company would help to reduce the size of the claim.

    “I don’t think it will be staying at $8.1bn.

    “I want to believe that the figure will reduce. Whether it will be dropped completely, I honestly cannot say at this time,” he added.

    Emefiele said the central bank had received documents about two weeks ago from MTN and four lenders involved in the case.

    The lenders are Standard Chartered, Stanbic IBTC Bank, Citibank and Diamond Bank, adding that the apex bank was in communication with all parties involved.

    “The central bank will be examining these; then it will be escalated up to my level,” he said, adding that he expected to get the results in a couple of weeks,” he said.

  • MTN shares up 2% on possibility of reduced repatriation

    South Africa’s MTN Group shares rose as much as 2.55 per cent after the Nigerian central bank said it might reduce the $8.1 billion it had ordered the telecoms firm to repatriate to Nigeria.

    At the Johannesburg Stock Exchange on Monday, MTN shares were up 2.03 per cent to 85.50 rand as early as 0837 GMT, due to the possibility of reducing the repatriation demand by MTN.

    Read Also:$8.1b: CBN raises MTN’s hope

    MTN and the central bank are in a dispute over the transfer of $8.1 billion of funds which the bank said the company had sent abroad in breach of foreign-exchange regulations.

    Godwin Emefiele said on Sunday the CBN may reduce the amount it had ordered MTN Nigeria to repatriate.

    Emefiele said, while addressing reporters in London that new documents provided by the telecom company would help to reduce the size of the claim.

    “I don’t think it will be staying at $8.1bn.

    “I want to believe that the figure will reduce. Whether it will be dropped completely, I honestly cannot say at this time,” he added.

    Emefiele said the central bank had received documents about two weeks ago from MTN and four lenders involved in the case.

    The lenders are Standard Chartered, Stanbic IBTC Bank, Citibank and Diamond Bank, adding that the apex bank was in communication with all parties involved.

    “The central bank will be examining these; then it will be escalated up to my level,” he said, adding that he expected to get the results in a couple of weeks,” he said.

  • $8.1b: CBN raises MTN’s hope

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) may reduce the $8.1billion it ordered MTN Nigeria to repatriate as part of an ongoing disagreement, its governor Godwin Emefiele said yesterday.

    The MTN and the CBN are in a dispute over the transfer of $8.1 billion of funds which the bank said the company had sent abroad in breach of foreign-exchange regulations. Nigeria accounts for a third of MTN’s annual core profit.

    “I don’t think it will be staying at $8.1 billion,” Emefiele said during a visit to London, adding he expected the issue to be dealt with “amicably and equitably”.

    “I want to believe that the figures will reduce. Whether they will be dropped completely, I honestly cannot say at this time.”

    Emefiele said the CBN had received documents two weeks ago from MTN and four lenders involved in the case –

    Standard Chartered, Stanbic IBTC Bank, Citibank and Diamond Bank – and was in communications with all parties involved.

    “The central bank will be examining these, then it will be escalated up to my level,” he said, adding he expected to get the results in a couple of weeks.

    The two sides are locked in a court dispute over the transaction. The central bank filed a counter-claim on Friday to a court request by MTN, which is seeking to stop the bank from forcing it to bring back the money.

    Emefiele said the MTN case was a one-off, and the central bank was not looking at transactions involving any other companies operating in Nigeria.

    “We respect the sanctity of these companies,” he said.

    Shares in MTN lost almost five per cent over the past week.

    Emefiele also said the CBN would continue to intervene in the foreign exchange markets, adding that he believed in a stable exchange rate regime.

    Nigeria has been battling to defend its currency and shore up its reserves of around $44 billion, hobbled by lower oil prices. At the same time, the oil exporter has suffered from high inflation, which edged up to 11.2 percent at its last reading – well above the central bank’s 6-9 percent target.

    Emefiele said Nigeria’s current stance of monetary tightening would continue.

  • Nigeria’s top DJs thrill crowd at MTN’s Jimmy’s Jump Off

    Before the iconic October 1st commemoration, ICT company, MTN sponsored one of the biggest pre-independence parties on Sunday, September 30, 2018 – an event that lasted to the early hours of the D day: October 1st. The party tagged “Jimmy’s Jump Off” had more than 20 DJs perform live to a crowd of over 1,000 Nigerians.

    The DJs all through the night spun their decks and treated the audience to iconic, patriotic and emotional songs like Sunny Ade’s “Nigeria yi ti gbogbowa ni”, Onyeka Onwenu’s “One Love” and of course millennials also had their songs played at the event such as the new unofficial national anthem by Naira Marley “Issa goal” which got the audience chanting “Naija Issa goal, Independence issa goal, 58 years issa goal”.

    It was all about National unity, pride and celebration as MTN Nigeria enabled the atmosphere for musical expression and independence celebration.  Additionally, the ICT giant also rewarded attendees with lots of prizes such as headsets, recharge cards, phones etc.

    Over the years, MTN Nigeria has been a significant promoter of Nigerian music and local content, with campaigns such as the Project Fame, which has given birth to household names in the music industry such as Praiz, Chidinma, Iyanya, Niniola, Immaculate amongst others.

    Also, with platforms like MTN Music+ – the largest music distributor in Africa – the company continues to show its support for Nigerian music. In 2014 alone, MTN generated over N5 billion for the music industry through the monetisation of Caller Ring Back Tunes utilising local musical content.

     

  • Jimmy Jatt, MTN, Djs Celebrate Nigeria @ 58 in Style

    On Sunday the 30th of September 2018 – telecommunication giant MTN sponsored the talk of the town party that lasted to the early hours of October 1st in the spirit of celebrating Nigeria at 58.

    The all night DJs and Independence celebrations party tagged; “Jimmy’s Jump Off” had more than 20 DJs perform live to a crowd of over 1,000 Nigerians in Lagos.

    The DJs all through the night spun their decks and treated the audience to iconic, patriotic and emotional songs like Sunny Ade’s “Nigeria yi ti gbogbowa ni”, Onyeka Onwenu’s “One Love” and of course millennials also had their songs played at the event such as the new unofficial national anthem by Naira Marley “Issa goal” which got the audience chanting “Naija Issa goal, Independence issa goal, 58 years issa goal”.

    It was all about National unity, pride and celebration as ICT company, MTN Nigeria enabled the atmosphere for musical expression and independence celebration. Additionally, the ICT giant also rewarded attendees with lots of prizes such as headsets, recharge cards, phones etc.

    Over the years the MTN Nigeria has been a significant promoter of Nigerian music and local content, with campaigns such as the Project Fame, which has given birth to household names in the music industry such as Praiz, Chidinma, Iyanya, Niniola, Immaculate among others.

    Also, with platforms like MTN Music+ – the largest music distributor in Africa – the company continues to show its support for Nigerian music. In 2014 alone, MTN generated over N5 billion for the music industry through the monetisation of Caller Ring Back Tunes utilising local musical content.

    The entertainment industry has been a source of pride since Nigeria’s independence. Some of the musical acts that have their names written in gold in the industry over the years include but not limited to; Fela Anikulapo Kuti, Sir Victor Uwaifor, Ebenezer Obey etc.

    We also have the contemporary Nigerian musicians and DJs such as 2face, Wizkid, Davido, Tiwa Savage, DJ Jimmy Jatt, DJ Spinall, DJ Cuppy.

    The night party continued with glitz and glamour as the artists hail their father land and reckoning for a prosperously built nation in great and lofty height were peace and justice shall reign.

  • Banks, MTN sanctions and matters arising 

    There is something unseemly about the sanctions and the circumstances around the sanctions issued by the Central Bank of Nigeria on the unfortunate five: MTN Nigeria and four financial institutions. Indeed, there are too many loose ends to the issue and expectedly, it has thrown up many questions and lent itself to deductions and misrepresentations. And I think the CBN must start to tie up the loose ends fast if it must be seen to have acted in good faith and in the interest of the nation.

    On Wednesday, 28 August 2018, the CBN directed four banks, namely Citibank, Diamond Bank, Stanbic IBTC and Standard Chartered Bank, to repay the sum of N5.87 billion for allegedly issuing irregular CCIs on behalf of some offshore investors of MTN Nigeria Communications Limited. Standard Chartered Bank was fined N2.4 billion, Stanbic IBTC N1.8 billion, Citibank Nigeria N1.2 billion and Diamond Bank N250 million. MTN was also directed by the apex bank to refund $8.134 billion to its coffers.

    The apex bank said its investigation was triggered by “allegations of remittance of foreign exchange with irregular Certificates of Capital Importation (CCIs)” between 2007 and 2015, in “flagrant violation of extant laws and regulations of Nigeria, including the Foreign Exchange (Monitoring and Miscellaneous Provisions) Act, 1995 of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and the Foreign Exchange Manual, 2006.”

    The CBN letter to MTN on its investigations and findings dated 28/8/2018 and routed through Standard Chartered Bank, with number GVD/GOV/CON/DGF/118/121 signed by the CBN Governor, Godwin Emefiele, had stated thus: i. The shareholders of your company invested the sum of $402,590,261.03 in the company from 2001 to 2006; ii. The investment was carried out through the inflow of foreign currency cash transfers and equipment importation, which was evidenced by the CCIs issued by Standard Chartered Bank, Citi Bank and Diamond Bank; iii. The CCIs issued at the time of the investment by the above banks to your organization in respect of the $402,590,261.03 showed that $59,436,923.44 was invested as shareholders’ loan and $343,153,339.56 as equity; iv. However, a review of your organisation’s financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2007 revealed that $399,594,146.00 was recorded/invested as shareholders’ loan and $2,996,117.00 as equity investment, in accordance with the shareholders’ agreement but contrary to the CCIs issued by the banks in (iii above….”

    Essentially, the apex bank revealed it had investigated the five companies on three key “infractions”: Issuance of certificates of capital importation for three items (1) foreign currency sourced locally; (2) falsely declared capital importation; and (3) on interest-free loans converted to preference share without authorization. “The CBN examiners had been investigating three charges of infractions against the four banks and MTN, particularly the manner of funding the equity investment into MTN and the subsequent capital repatriation that resulted thereafter,” Emefiele had said in an interview to clarify the issue.

    According to Emefiele, the third infraction “is actually the crux of the matter in dispute,” which is the “unauthorized conversion of a loan of $399 million to preference shares by the MTN and the banks and thereafter the repatriation of the sum of $8.1 billion without CBN’s final approval.”

    The very first puzzle to any informed monitor of the unfolding case will be the time lapse between the infraction and the sanction. The infraction happened 11 years ago, 2007 as shown by item iv in the CBN letter. And the CBN cannot claim ignorance in this case because item v. of the same letter clearly stated that Standard Chartered Bank sought “CBN’s approval to convert the shareholders’ loan to preference shares,” and that “an approval-in-principle was granted,” pending the fulfillment of certain conditions.

    As a regulator, what steps did the CBN take to ascertain that the given conditions had been met? The Foreign Exchange (Monitoring and Miscellaneous Provisions) Act, 1995 of the Federal Republic of Nigeria that CBN succinctly quoted in its letter mandated that an authorized forex dealer who issued a CCI to an investor must “within 48 hours thereafter make returns to the Central Bank.”

    In its defence on the conversion, Stanbic IBTC Bank had denied involvement in any loan conversion but stated that the “CCIs issued by and received from Standard Chartered Bank Limited indicated inflows that had been received for preference shares and made no reference to any shareholder loans.” What this means is that there was a CCI already on the converted loans, which Standard Chartered Bank forwarded to Stanbic IBTC Bank. Based on the Act, CBN must have received a report on that CCI 48 hours after the issuance. So, why did it take this long for CBN to act on a falsification? And why did it take “allegations” about three years ago (CBN said it started investigating the issue 30 months ago), obviously by an external stakeholder, for CBN to act on what it already knew over 8 years prior?

    In 2017, CBN had told the Senate committee investigating the matter that it “had pardoned the offences and based on this, the Senate toed the same line with the CBN and cleared MTN and the banks of the issues.” Before the Senate hearing, Emefiele revealed, “CBN wrote a letter dated February 22, 2017 granting MTN the permission to continue paying dividends on the CCIs” in question.

    This is strange considering that at this time, based on CBN’s timelines, it was already clear that the CCIs were issued “illegally”, without proper approvals. Another pointer to CBN’s knowledge of the infraction is contained in its letter to MTN. The CBN had stated in item vii. “The action of your banker in aiding your organization in the illegal conversion of the shareholders’ loan was later described by SCB [Standard Chartered Bank] in a letter to the CBN dated December 10, 2009 as an ‘unintended omission’.” CBN knew of this infraction since 2009, at least.

    So, why were the five “pardoned” and why was MTN granted “permission to continue” in the illegality? A greenhorn banker will tell you that the most important virtue required of a banker and emphasised above all else during training or orientation is integrity. The CBN action here is hard to comprehend and fail to speak to the venerated virtue. And why pardon offences if the investigation was still ongoing and you had yet to have the full picture of infractions committed? Some will call such pardon flippant. It is hard to disagree.

    The alleged infractions are not minor. They are not traffic offences where the offending parties can simply be asked to go and sin no more. These are very weighty allegations involving huge capital, about N2.9 trillion (that’s about a quarter of the 2018 budget) that may have been siphoned illegally out of the economy. So, whose interest was CBN serving to have looked the other way while the nation was being fleeced only to turn round and pretending righteousness now? CBN must know that monitoring is an important tool of regulation. In this case, it is obvious the apex bank failed itself and Nigerians.

    I believe CBN has been unwieldy in its approach to and management of this issue, particularly its willingness and hastiness to go public at a time when the banking sector is still reeling from unusually high toxic assets and is suffering confidence issues. Unfortunately, this is not the first time the CBN has conducted its affairs in public thus eroding confidence in the financial services industry. The Sanusi Lamido Sanusi era was defined by such media sensationalism. Many have long argued that the CBN is sometimes used as a political tool by the government in power. In my opinion, this may be one of those times CBN is being used in such manner and I stand to be proven wrong.

    It is sad that our institutions are usually ready fodders in the hands of people who have scant regard for economic growth and development. As stakeholders, we must all insist that our institutions are better managed and national interest should supersede personal and sectional considerations. It may sound farfetched, but it is actions like this that tends to harm our desire for growth.

    .Mokelu, a former banker, and founder of an NGO on Corporate Governance, writes in from Ilorin, Kwara State.

     

     

  • MTN, Microsoft empower over 50 SMEs

    MTN Nigeria, in partnership with Microsoft, has empowered over 50 Small and Medium Scale Enterprises (SMEs) in Lagos.

    It was the first session of the MTN – Microsoft Training Programme- designed at empowering the fast-growing SME segment to streamline their financial and business processes, improve customer interactions and make better decisions with integrated intelligence.

    The training allowed for business owners to standardise their entire organisational business processes, including sales, finance, human resources, operations, logistics and marketing to function as one integrated whole, by connecting data across accounting, sales, purchasing, inventory and customer interactions.

    The SMEs gained access to a holistic view of business management and chart financial performance in real time. Over 50 SMEs benefited from the six-hour session and gained first hand experience on how to use Microsoft Excel to improve accounting and record keeping.

    Speaking on the experience, one of the entrepreneurs, Cecelia Edom, CEO of Cece Confectionary said: “This has been very instrumental in helping to bring technology and management closer to entrepreneurs. It was a great opportunity to show anyone that they can learn the basics of computer science in a fun and engaging way.”

    The participants demonstrated  enthusiasm throughout the sessions, as well as the willingness to learn how to perfect their organisational skills.

    Selected guests at the training were also treated to various gifts to help impact their business positively.

    MTN continues to seek ways to contribute to the Nigerian economy by extending its partnership capabilities to brighten the lives of small business owners within the country.

    The training is the first in the series of training collaborations MTN has planned for small business owners across various regions in the country to deliver value to businesses.

     

  • MTN mulls new share trading

    MTN Nigeria is exploring other means of availing the public of the benefits of owning its shares outside of listing on the Nigerian Stock Exchange, its Chief Financial Officer Ralph Mupita has said.

    The new share unbundling idea is a work in progress, Mupita said.

    “The decision isn’t final.” he declared.

    The MTN Group Limited is facing a combined $10 billion in claims from authorities in Nigeria and may no longer seek to raise capital through an initial public offering on the the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE), the CFO told Bloomberg in an interview yesterday in South Africa.

    The telco’s decision to reconsider listing its shares in the Nigerian Capital Market, through an Initial Public Offering (IPO), is a direct fallout of its lingering disputes with the Nigerian authorities (its biggest market) that wiped out more than a third of the company’s market value over three weeks. MTN pledged to list the shares after being fined $1 billion for not disconnecting SIM cards two years ago.

    Mupita admitted that “the IPO type of listing has become challenging under current market conditions, we are exploring other options. The Nigerian business would not get fair value under current market conditions.” A listing by introduction is the simplest way forward, he statde.

    Mupita said MTN could complete the listing by the end of this year or first quarter of 2019, saying this is irrespective of the dispute with the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) over the repatriation of $8.1 billion out of Nigeria and a separate tussle over $2 billion in back taxes.

    In his words: “We have sought legal protection for our Nigerian business and a judge has been appointed for upcoming hearings.”

    Already,  the CBN last week said it is considering new information provided by MTN and four banks into the outflows and that it expects to resolve the matter soon.

    In the weeks after Nigerian authorities challenged the transfer of funds, MTN plunged 35 per cent, but the stock has since recovered about half of that drop, a development the MTN CFO admitted cost its “shareholders $5.5 billion,”   MTN’s investor base is about 44 per cent South African. Other major shareholders are based in the U.S., the U.K., Europe and the Middle East.

    Notwithstanding the turbulence by the telco, MTN still sees a great business case for Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation, with less than a third of users currently on the internet, Mupita said.

    “We are engaging with authorities and investors and hope to reach a speedy resolution on the matter, to deal with the overhang on our share and the concerns of shareholders about Nigeria’s investment climate for foreign companies,” Mupita said.

    Nigerian authorities have come under criticism following an impasse with MTN and lenders including Citigroup Inc., Standard Chartered Plc, Standard Bank Group Limited. and Lagos-based Diamond Bank Plc that threatened to spook investors.

    There has been mixed feeling on how the Nigerian authority has handled the MTN saga so far. “Investors are getting very nervous and the last thing Nigeria needs is for investors to be nervous,” the Chief Executive Officer, Financial Derivatives Company, Bismarck Rewane, said, stressing that government should resolve the issue with MTN “as quickly as possible.