NCC Moves To Deactivate MTN Subscribers Over Refusal To Pay N1.4trn Fine
Effort by a Lagos based lawyer, Oluyinka
Oyeniji to stop the Nigeria Communication Commission (NCC) on alleged
plan to deactivate millions of MTN subscribers line has failed before
the Federal High Court, Lagos.
The lawyer alleged that NCC was planning
to take the action against MTN and its subscribers following the
alleged refusal of the telecommunication company to pay the N1.4
trillion fine slammed on it for alleged unethical practice.
In his bid, Oyeniji dragged NCC and MTN before court, filed suit on behalf of himself and millions of MTN subscribers.
In a motion expert filed before the
court, the plaintiffs want an order of interim injunction restraining
the first respondent(NCC) from exerting, enforcing any sanctions on the
second respondent (MTN), especially on the sum of N1.4 trillion or any
sum relating to compliance over subscribers deactivation at all, pending
the determination of the motion on notice.
The plaintiff also seek for an order of
interim injunction restraining MTN from making any payments regarding
the N1.4 trillion penalty exerted and imposed upon it by NCC pending the
determination of the motion on notice.
The lawyer also want an order directing parties to maintain the status quo pending the argument of the motion on Notice.
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He also seek for an order mandating the
first respondent (NCC) to tender documentary evidence of accounts to
justify the fines imposed on the second respondent (MTN) as well as
other telecommunication operators including the appropriation and
disbursement thereof from 2002 till date in accordance with Order 44
Rule 4 of the Civil Procedure Rules, 2009.
He want the court to grant leave to the
applicant for the originating processes to be served outside
jurisdiction of the court on the second respondent and for such
processes to be marked “CONCURRENT”
The motion was supported by a 24 paragraph affidavit.
At the hearing of the suit on Friday
before Justice Mohammed Idris, Yemi Salma who represented the applicant
told the court about the alleged plan of the NCC to deactivate MTN
subscribers lines following the refusal of MTN to pay the N1.4 trillion
fine.
The applicant urged the court to grant
the expert order, he said, he read in a Thisday publication and online
news medium that the regulatory body will carried out the sanction by
Monday next week which will affect million of subscribers.
However, the judge in his ruling noted
that a newspaper publication was a mere speculation which could not be
tendered as evidence in court.
The court therefore thrown out the
interim order but granted the order seeking to serve the respondents
outside jurisdiction of the court.
The matter was adjourned till November 19, 2015 for hearing on the motion on notice.
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