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Vodafone takeover of Ghana Telecom delayed by opposition deputies
Posted: 19 July 2008 0622 hrs

 
 
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ACCRA : Opposition lawmakers in Ghana's parliament on Friday blocked approval of the sale of a majority stake in state-owned Ghana Telecom to Britain's Vodafone.

With the chamber going into the summer recess, Vodafone and the Ghanaian government will have to wait until October when deputies return.

"It gives an opportunity for a rethinking, reassessment and reworking of what is going on," the opposition National Democratic Congress' spokesman on finance, Benjamin Kumbuor, said.

Deputy Communications Minister, Opare Ansah, told AFP that there is nothing wrong with the agreement.

The government's announcement that a 70-percent stake in Ghana Telecom was to be sold to the British firm has provoked stern opposition from some politicians who think that the proposed deal, which values Ghana Telecom at 1.3 billion dollars (over 800 million euros), is not in the national interest.

Vodafone has agreed to pay 900 million dollars for the 70-percent stake, but the opposition party says the shares are worth more than that.

"Other bidders are likely to offer higher bids than Vodafone and address the socio-economic needs of the country," the opposition NDC said in a statement.

"We have been scammed," one of the country's best known economists, Nii Moi Thompson, said after going through the agreement.

"It became embarrassing to me that an entire government made up of some of the best-educated people in this country will sign off on a document that gives off portions of our economy for a thousand years that they weren't even aware of."

Ghana Telecom is the west African country's third largest mobile phone group with 1.4 million customers or 17 percent of the market.

"Ghana is one of the most attractive markets in Africa with mobile subscribers growing at more than 55 percent per year and mobile penetration around 35 percent," Vodafone chief executive Arun Sarin said on when announcing the deal on July 3.

He added: "I expect that our investment will generate substantial benefits for Vodafone and for the Ghanaian economy and we are delighted that we will be working in partnership with the Government of Ghana."

In recent years, Vodafone has expanded aggressively into emerging markets across Asia and Africa, as it seeks to offset the effects of flagging sales and intense competition in maturing Western markets.

- AFP /ls

 

 



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