Frankline Sunday
The proposed merger between Airtel Kenya and Telkom Kenya is facing
fresh hurdles as the two telecoms operators contest conditions set by
the...
Competition Authority of Kenya (CAK).
The companies have filed an application with the Competition Tribunal
to review the tough conditions set by CAK last year, including a
requirement for the merged entity to retain all workers for two years
and refrain from selling the company for at least five years.
“The merged entity, or part of it, is restricted from entering into any
form of sale agreement within the next five years,” said the CAK in a
notice detailing the merger conditions last December.
Telkom and Airtel want this condition set aside in its entirety.
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CAK
had also instructed the merged entity, Airtel-Telkom, to retain at
least 349 of the 674 employees for two years from the date of the
implementation of the merger, a condition the firms also want reviewed.
“Condition 7 imposed by the Competition Authority of Kenya…in relation
to the retention period of employees of the target be reviewed and
amended from two years to 12 months,” state the two firms in their joint
application.
Last year, Telkom Kenya Chief Executive Mugo Kibati said the company’s
employees would be catered for and that even the ones that would be laid
off in the ongoing restructuring stand a chance of getting a job at the
new Airtel-Telkom venture.
“We are merging certain businesses of Telkom with Airtel Kenya to create
a joint venture and also leaving behind a much stronger company, profit
and loss-wise, where we are going to build a technology and digital
services company that will create new jobs,” he said.
The two firms are also protesting conditions for the spectrum resources
owned by Telkom to revert to the State and want the right to have
Airtel-Telkom bill the government at market rates to access the
State-owned National Optic Fibre Backbone Infrastructure.
Telkom currently manages the cable, which cuts across most of the
country, on behalf of the government and has preferential access to the
network that currently supplies Internet to most county governments and
State departments.
CAK has invited other interested parties to make submissions to the
tribunal regarding the transaction that was supposed to have been
concluded by December last year.
The merger has also faced objections from other stakeholders, including
former employees of Telkom Kenya who have a pending legal dispute with
the telco.
Safaricom had also objected to the merger, noting that Airtel and Telkom
would default on some Sh1.2 billion they owed in mobile termination
rates.
Airtel and Telkom have a combined market share of 32.7 per cent and
while a merger would give them a third of the market, the merger will
still be a distant second to Safaricom which had a share of 63.5 per
cent as of June 2019.
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