News
MTN pays N500,000 to customer over illegal call credit deduction
Telecommunications giant, MTN, on Monday paid N500,000 to one of its customers, Oluwole Aluko, in compliance with a Federal High Court judgment.
Mr Aluko, a legal practitioner, had in 2016 sued MTN, alleging unlawful deduction of his call credit.
The judge, Nathaniel Ayo-Emmanuel, of the Federal High Court, Ibadan, had in 2017 entered judgment in favour of the claimant when there was no representation for MTN throughout the hearing period until the judgment day.
But Abiola Olagunju and Fatiullah Tiamiyu later announced their representation for MTN, with an application asking the court to set aside its judgment against their client.
They had argued that the company’s legal department was never aware of the suit against the company before the court.
Mr Aluko, however, presented before the court evidence of court summons served on the defendants with proof of receipt in a criminal contempt suit he instituted against the duo.
He had argued that the duo were trying to pervert the course of justice.
At the resumed hearing on Monday, Mr Aluko informed the court that MTN had paid him N500,000 in compliance with the court’s earlier order.
The judge, consequently, struck out the claimant’s suit of criminal contempt against MTN’s lawyers.
-
Football5 days agoArgentine presenter Florencia Peña resigns after false on-air report about Lionel Messi’s father
-
Business1 week agoNigeria launches FreeTV digital platform with over 100 free channels
-
Business5 days agoAward-winning Mitsubishi L200 gets anniversary price cut in Nigerian market
-
Latest5 days agoSex video leak sparks disciplinary action as FUOYE suspends two students
-
Business4 days agoThe CBN’s Exposure Draft on Holding Companies of Banks: Matters Arising
-
Football6 days agoAfrican Teams Show Resilience on FIFA World Cup 2026 Matchday One
-
Latest4 days agoTinubu Grants Customs Boss Adeniyi Final Six-Month Extension to Oversee Single Window Project, Succession
-
Comments and Issues4 days agoEkiti 2026: Will INEC redeem self or slide further?

