Nairobi – The Ethiopian government on Thursday said it would sell up to 45 percent of Ethio Telecom, a state-owned monopoly, up from an initial offer of 40 percent.
Ethiopia launched the process for the partial sale of the behemoth carrier in 2021 as part of a push to open up the country’s tightly controlled economy.
The sale ran into headwinds and was postponed last March before the process was re-activated in mid-November, two weeks after the signing of a peace deal to end a two-year war in northern Ethiopia.
“The Government of Ethiopia is proposing a partial privatization… by selling up to 45% of the equity share capital of the Company,” the ministry of finance said in a public advertisement.
The government initially launched the process with a view to selling a 40-percent stake, inviting proposals from interested parties.
ALSO READ | Ethiopia relaunches partial privatisation of Ethio Telecom
It hoped that opening up Ethio Telecom would make the carrier – which has 44 million subscribers – more competitive and efficient.
Ending the state monopoly in the telecoms sector is a key component of an economic reform package that Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed announced after coming to power in 2018.
In 2021, Ethiopia also issued a tender to award two licences to private telecommunication operators.
One licence was awarded to a consortium led by Kenya’s Safaricom, making it the first private telecommunications company to operate in the country of more than 110 million people.
But a bid by South Africa’s MTN was deemed too low and turned down.
Follow African Insider on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram
Source: AFP
Picture: Twitter/@FocusAfri
For more African news, visit Africaninsider.com