Sudan’s telecoms firm shrugs off US sanctions to expand in Africa
November 16, 2007 (DAKAR, Senegal) — U.S. sanctions on Sudan’s telecoms company Sudatel
Sudatel, which is 26-percent state-owned, featured on a list of 31 Sudanese companies barred in May from doing business with American firms, as Washington ratcheted up pressure on Khartoum to halt violence in its Western Darfur region.
Sudatel CEO Emad Ahmed, visiting Senegal to hand over a $200 million cheque for a new telecoms licence, said the sanctions were not inhibiting its growth into West Africa, where it started mobile phone operations in Mauritania earlier this year.
“We are now in discussions with the government of Nigeria: we have already been discussing with an existing operator to acquire part of it,” Ahmed told Reuters, adding the company was also in talks to join an existing operator in Congo.
“In Niger, there is a (mobile phone) tender which is already launched. We are going to participate in that tender.”
Ahmed said Sudatel was focusing on West Africa, which has one of the continent’s fastest growing telecoms markets, and regarded southern African markets as more saturated. Analysts expect the number of subscribers in West Africa to double by 2011 to more than 100 million.
Sudatel, which is listed in Bahrain and Abu Dhabi, has in recent months paid $100 million to start mobile phone services in Mauritania before winning the licence for fixed-line and mobile services in Senegal, seeing off competition from Celtel, a subsidiary of Kuwait’s Zain
Sudatel expects to start services in Senegal in six months and have coverage of all of Senegal’s main towns within three years. It expects to spend $500 million on rolling out its network over at least five years.
“By the end of the year, we hope to be in Mauritania, Senegal, Nigeria and one other West African country,” Chief Commercial Officer Ihab Osman told reporters.
USING CHINESE TECHNOLOGY
Sudatel had no intention of busting the U.S. sanctions and had notified its suppliers — including Ericsson
“The sanctions do not affect Sudatel at all. We are still dealing with the main builders of telecommunications … except American companies,” Ahmed said.
“The technology is available everywhere: it is available in Europe, it is available in the Far East and China, especially in China.”
Sudatel’s international growth is being fuelled by a robust domestic economy.
Despite U.S. trade sanctions since 1997, Sudan’s economy has enjoyed real growth rates averaging 7 percent over the last 10 years, and hopes to pick up speed in 2007.
Since selling its Sudanese GSM mobile phone business to Kuwait’s Zain two years ago, Ahmed said Sudatel had already attracted 3 million subscribers to its new third-generation CDMA mobile phone network.
(Reuters)