Ghana parliament delays Vodafone decision
ACCRA (Reuters) - Ghana's parliament delayed on Friday a decision on a deal that would allow Vodaphone Group (VOD.L) buy a 70 percent stake in Ghana Telecom, the country's third largest mobile phone operator.
Vodafone signed a deal with the government in July to pay $900 million (450 million pounds) for its share of the company, but will have to wait until lawmakers return from a month-long break that began on Friday before the purchase can be approved.
The government was forced on Friday to reintroduce an amended version of the agreement to members of a joint committee examining the deal in order to address some of the concerns raised by its critics.
After MPs had adjourned, Communications Minister Benjamin Aggrey-Ntim told Reuters he was confident the deal would be approved "within the third quarter period."
Vodafone sees Ghana as one of the most attractive markets in Africa as the country of 24 million has subscribers growing at more than 55 percent and mobile penetration around 35 percent.
The deal would give Vodafone majority control of the company, which has a 17 percent share of the market and had around 1.4 million customers at the end of March. It is also Ghana's leading fixed-line operator.
(Reporting by Kwasi Kpodo, Writing by David Lewis, Editing by Andre Grenon)
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