MTN Drags AGF, CBN To Court Over $10.1bn Demands

Posted by Admin | 6 years ago | 1,949 times



MTN Nigeria yesterday filed a suit against the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and the Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF) to seek a restraining order.

The telecommunication sought relief over the $2 billion demand for unpaid taxes owed the nation and the repatriation of $8.1 billion dividends illegally repatriated to South Africa. In the suit filed in Lagos, the telecommunications firm is seeking an injunctive relief to protect its assets and shareholders’ rights.

In a statement by MTN, the company said it continues to “categorically and unequivocally” deny all charges related to investigations by the CBN and AGF into the company’s CCIs and unpaid taxes respectively. The attorney General of the Federation (AGF), Mallam Abubabar Malami had last week demanded the mobile operator refund to the government accumulated tax arrears of $2 billion owed over the last 10 years.

The mobile operator fond of stepping on hot waters, a fortnight ago ran foul of the federal government laws when it was discovered by the CBN that MTN and its bankers had used illegal Certificate of Capital Importation (CCIs) to move $8.1 billion from 2007 to 2015 out of the country.

This is not the first time MTN is taking Nigerian government to court. In January 2016, MTN went to court when it failed to deactivate over five million used simcards from its network as was fined $5.2 billion as penalty. It later withdrew the suit and wrote a letter of apology to the Nigerian Communications Commission, asking for leniency.

MTN Nigeria Corporate Relations, Executive Tobe Okigbo, said the recourse to the court was to protect MTN Nigeria’s assets and shareholder rights within the confines of the law.

“We have applied today in the Federal High Court of Nigeria for injunctive relief restraining the CBN and the AGF from taking further action in respect of their orders, while we continue to engage with the relevant authorities on these matters.

“The simple reality is that MTN Nigeria has never repatriated dividends on the CCIs referenced by the CBN and that MTN is fully compliant with Nigerian tax law. With situations like this, it is vital for both the government, regulators and the company to have absolute clarity on the nature of both the allegations being made and the processes that are being followed. In the absence of this clarity, our only option is to seek judicial intervention and to ask the courts to act as adjudicator. This has been done today,” he said.

Meanwhile, the chief executive officer and president of MTN Group, Mr. Rob Shuter yesterday assured that the company will seek an amicable resolution of its rift with the federal government over the $2 billion unpaid tax areas and the demand that it return $8.1 billion dividends illegally repatriated out of the country.

Shuter, who spoke at a press conference at the ITU Telecom World 2018 organised by the International Telecommunications Union (ITU) which opened yesterday in Durban, South Africa said “we are committed to the country. We shall do everything possible to resolve the matter. Nigeria is our largest market and we appreciate the love shown to us by the people and government of Nigeria over the years since we began operating in the country 17 years ago.”  He said MTN operates in 22 countries in Africa and Asia with over 220 million and 55 million of them comes from Nigeria.

“I can say that indeed the last two weeks have been very tough, I mean challenging, but being the largest market, we are working towards having an amicable solution to the matter,” he said. 


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