Zimbabwe has shut down the country's second
largest mobile phone operator for breaching black empowerment laws
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Zimbabwe on
Wednesday shut down the country's second largest mobile phone service provider,
Telecel Zimbabwe, partly for breaching black empowerment laws, officials said.
International telecom firm VimpelCom, based in the
Netherlands, has a 60 percent stake in Telecel Zimbabwe, making it the major
shareholder. Zimbabwe's indigenization law compels foreign
companies to cede majority shares to local partners.
"The Telecel Zimbabwe licence has been
cancelled... with effect from 28 April 2015," the Postal and
Telecommunications Regulatory Authority (POTRAZ) said in a statement.
POTRAZ did not give reasons for the move, but
Information and Communication Technology Minister Supa Mandiwanzira warned last
month of Telecel's impending closure for a breach of the black empowerment law
and failing to pay a licence fee.
"Our position that Telecel has been operating
without a licence and failed to honour local empowerment laws is the same
position that has been adopted by Cabinet," Mandiwanzira said.
To minimize the inconvenience to Telecel's two million
subscribers, POTRAZ said it had issued a special 30-day licence to enable
Telecel to wrap up its business.
"During this period, it is expected that Telecel
Zimbabwe subscribers switch to alternative networks," the authority said.
"A further 60 days has been given to Telecel
Zimbabwe to decommission their telecommunication equipment," it added.
The International Monetary Fund has urged Zimbabwe to
review its "indigenization" policy, which has scared off much-needed
investment in the country's moribund economy.
Zimbabwe's
economy has been on a downturn for more than a decade since veteran President
Robert Mugabe's government oversaw the violent eviction of white farmers under
controversial land reforms.
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