The former chief executive officer of MTN Group in South Africa, Mr.
Sifiso Dabengwa, and his counterpart in Nigeria, Mr. Mike Ikpoki, were
paid $2.8 million (about N560 million) as severance package after they
were forced to resign, following the N1.04 trillion fine imposed on MTN
Nigeria by the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC).
According to Bloomberg, the information
on the severance package was disclosed in MTN Group’s annual report
published monday in Johannesburg, South Africa.
The report said Dabengwa was handed a
23.7 million rand ($1.6 million) payout for resigning from Africa’s
biggest wireless operator after the company was fined by the Nigerian
telecoms regulator, which equates to almost three years’ basic salary
and took Dabengwa’s total 2015 remuneration to 40.6 million rand.
In Nigeria, MTN also paid Ikpoki the sum
of 17.3 million rand ($1.2 million) in compensation, totalling $2.8
million (N560 million) that was doled out to both executives by the
group.
MTN was fined N1.04 trillion in October last year, for contravening the directives of NCC on unregistered SIM card deactivation.
MTN was fined N1.04 trillion in October last year, for contravening the directives of NCC on unregistered SIM card deactivation.
Though the fine was later reduced to N780 billion, Dabengwa and Ikpoki were forced to resign over the fiasco.
MTN is still in talks with the federal government on the payment of the fine.
Bloomberg reported that MTN shares fell 1.7 per cent to 144.86 rand as of 3.08 pm in Johannesburg, valuing the company at 267 billion rand. The stock has declined 24 per cent since the fine was made public.
Bloomberg reported that MTN shares fell 1.7 per cent to 144.86 rand as of 3.08 pm in Johannesburg, valuing the company at 267 billion rand. The stock has declined 24 per cent since the fine was made public.
The two executives were rewarded even
after they resigned to take responsibility for the Nigeria penalty,
which equates to about three years of MTN’s earnings before interest,
taxes, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA).
The former CEO of MTN, Phuthuma Nhleko,
who returned as executive chairman to resolve the Nigeria crisis after
Dabengwa resigned, was said to have been paid 5 million rand for work
from November 9 until the end of the year. His contract runs until May
9, indicating a total payout of 17.5 million rand for six month’s work.
He may also be due a bonus when his contract expires, according to the
annual report. The company expects to name a new CEO by the end of June.
MTN and Nhleko have yet to settle the
fine, despite hiring former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder to
represent the company and making a N50 billion ($251 million) down
payment.
In March, the wireless operator proposed
a $1.5 billion package that included cash, government access to its
wireless network and an offer to buy Nigerian sovereign debt.
While the offer hasn’t been formally
rejected, negotiations are not currently underway, Nigeria Minister of
Communications Adebayo Shittu said last week.
“I am sure shareholders are not happy to
pay out exorbitant golden parachutes to management that were asked to
leave because they were incompetent,” Michael Treherne, a money-manager
at Vestact Ltd., which holds MTN stock, said by phone.
However, the payout to Dabengwa may be the cheapest option if Nhleko can resolve the fine in MTN’s favour, he said.
Nigeria is the biggest of MTN’s 22 markets across Africa and the Middle East, with about 61 million subscribers.
Emma Okonji with agency report
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