Johannesburg - Turkish mobile operator Turkcell has filed a
$4.2bn lawsuit in a US court against South African rival MTN Group [JSE:MTN]
over alleged corruption in a deal in Iran, the companies said on Thursday.
Turkcell said in a statement that it had filed the lawsuit
in a US federal court in Washington, accusing MTN of violating international
law. Both companies have business dealings in the United States.
MTN said in a separate statement that the case could seek up
to $4.2bn in damages.
Turkcell said that it was awarded Iran's first private GSM
licence in 2004 through an international tender.
"Subsequently Turkcell was barred from concluding its
licence arrangement, and Iran entered into a licence agreement with the South
Africa-based operator MTN, instead of Turkcell," it said.
MTN now owns a 49% stake in the Iranian mobile telecoms
company Irancell, which holds the operating licence. MTN's 33 million clients
in Iran make up 21% of its total subscriber base.
Turkcell did not disclose the details of its lawsuit, but
has previously accused MTN of bribing government officials and pressing
Pretoria to endorse Iran's nuclear programme in exchange for rights to the GSM
licence.
"MTN continues to believe that there is no legal merit
to Turkcell's claim and no basis for such claim to be brought before a US
court," the South African firm said.
"MTN will accordingly oppose the claim. MTN further
notes the South African government's denial of the allegations that MTN
exercised influence over it."
The Turkcell dispute comes as Washington is pressuring allies to cut business ties with Tehran.