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Ugandan President demands list of shares on local exchange from MTN

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Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni says telecom firm MTN Uganda needs to sell shares on the local stock exchange to facilitate domestic ownership of the company.

The Ugandan President said the aim was to ensure more of the money it earned stayed in the country.

Museveni made the comments while meeting MTN Group’s President and CEO Rob Shuter on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos on Thursday.

The company is the East African country’s largest telecommunications firm, controlling a subscriber base of more than 10 million.

However, relations between MTN Uganda and authorities have become strained after the country this week deported two of its executives after accusations they were compromising national security.

“It is important that you float shares on the local stock exchange to allow for local ownership,” Museveni was quoted as telling Shuter, according to a statement from his office.

Museveni accused some unnamed telecoms companies of dodging taxes by under-declaring the volume of calls and that his government had bought machines that helped detect such activity.

Museveni also said telecommunication firms in Africa, which were often foreign owned, repatriated profits back home to the detriment of local economies.

“You should foresee these trade deficits. More locally owned companies should be allowed to earn money so that most of it remains here,” he said.

MTN Uganda did not immediately respond to an emailed request for comment.

The statement from the president’s office quoted Shuter as saying the firm was in negotiations with a Ugandan state-controlled National Social Security Fund (NSSF) for a possible sale of shares to the fund.

There was no confirmation from MTN.

MTN is in negotiations with Ugandan authorities for a ten-year extension of its operating licence after it expired in October last year but there has been disagreements over the amount of licence fees to be paid.

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