Article page new theme
International

Mobile Operator Fueled Boko Haram Insurgency

Mobile phone giant MTN fuelled the terrorist-led insurgency in Nigeria by failing to disconnect unregistered SIM cards, the Nigerian president has said. Muhammadu Buhari made the comment during a visit to Nigeria by his South African counterpart Jacob Zuma.

Last year, Nigeria fined the South African-owned firm $3.4 billion (£2.7 billion) for missing a deadline to disconnect cards. Nigeria believes Boko Haram militants use unregistered SIM cards to coordinate attacks, BBC reported.

The fine has overshadowed talks in the capital, Abuja, between the leaders of Africa’s two largest economies.

“You know how the unregistered [SIM cards] are being used by terrorists and between 2009 and today, at least 10,000 Nigerians were killed by Boko Haram,” President Buhari said at a joint press conference with Zuma.

Other mobile phone operators complied with a mid-2015 deadline to register all SIM cards, but “unfortunately, MTN was very, very slow and contributed to the casualties”, Buhari added, in his first comments on the issue.

Nigeria initially imposed a $5.2 billion fine on MTN in October, but brought it down to $3.4 billion.

Buhari said MTN, which was in talks with Nigeria to reduce the fine further, could make gradual payments, Reuters reported.

Last month, MTN said it had dropped court action to challenge the fine and had paid $250 million as part of efforts to reach an “amicable settlement”.

MTN has 231 million subscribers in 22 countries across Africa, Asia and the Middle East. However, Nigeria is its biggest market.

In September, the company was named as most-admired brand in Africa in the Brand Africa 100 awards, beating Samsung, while it was also awarded the continent’s most valuable brand, worth $4.6 billion.