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DSTV Price Increase: We Didn’t Disobey Court Injunction~Multichoice - Satellite TV Technology - Nairaland

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DSTV Price Increase: We Didn’t Disobey Court Injunction~Multichoice by illiad: 11:38pm On Apr 16, 2015
Price Increase: We Didn’t Disobey Court Injunction –MultiChoice

April 16, 2015

John Ugbe, Managing Director, MultiChoice Nigeria

Multichoice Nigeria Limited, owners and operators of DStv, has described as inaccurate publications, news reports
and commentaries on various media platforms that it disobeyed an interim injunction restraining it from enforcing
the increase in subscription rates for its programmes bouquet.
The position of the pay TV company was contained in a statement signed by Mrs. Kemi Shaba of the MultiChoice Legal Department on Thursday.
The statement noted that as at 2 April, when the Federal High Court granted the orders of interim injunction, the price increase had already taken effect, having commenced on 1 April 2015.

“The status quo as at 2 April 2015 when the order was made was that the prices had already been increased,” the statement issued in Lagos read.
“MultiChoice thus reiterates that it is not in breach of or disobeying the order of interim injunction made by the Federal High Court on 2nd April 2015,”
the statement said. It would be recalled that on 2 April,
Justice C.J Aneke of the Federal High Court, Lagos, granted an interim injunction, ordering parties to a suit
challenging the new subscription rates announced by MultiChoice to maintain the status quo and it restrained
MultiChoice from enforcing its planned increase in cost of different classes of viewing or programmes bouquet. The court adjourned hearing in the suit till 16 April (yesterday).

MultiChoice was served with the orders on 8 April.
The statement further explained that that the contract agreement between MultiChoice and all its subscribers
(including the parties who filed the suit) explicitly states that MultiChoice
reserves the right to change prices and channels.
This fact, it added, was not disclosed to the court before the orders of interim injunction was obtained.
The statement also said as a result, MultiChoice’s lawyers, on Thursday, filed processes challenging the court’s jurisdiction to entertain the matter and make the order of interim injunction of 2 April.
The company’s lawyers have similarly filed processes seeking to set aside the
interim injunction on several grounds. One of these is whether a court is legally empowered to fix prices for a
private concern such as MultiChoice in a free-market economy, the model that exists in the country.

MultiChoice also insists that its challenge of the jurisdiction of the court
and the application to set aside the order make the interim injunction unenforceable until the determination of the court’s jurisdictional competence.
“When the suit came at the Federal High Court on Thursday, our lawyers raised all these issues before the honourable court and the matter was
adjourned to 5th May 2015 for hearing of the application challenging jurisdiction of the court,” the company said.

MultiChoice maintains that it notified the general public and DStv subscribers that, with effect from 1 April 2015, it
would effect an increase in prices charged for its services.

Source:
www.pmnewsnigeria.com/2015/04/16/price-increase-we-didnt-disobey-court-injunction-multichoice/#14292218731512&{type:load,argument:,result:null}
Re: DSTV Price Increase: We Didn’t Disobey Court Injunction~Multichoice by Habayomie(m): 12:44am On Apr 17, 2015
#send_them_away
Re: DSTV Price Increase: We Didn’t Disobey Court Injunction~Multichoice by guass(m): 10:11pm On Apr 20, 2015
Prices of goods in a free market are not determined by the law court, but by the market forces. When ECONET first arrived my territory long ago the SIM card was sold at 10,000naira per one and charges then was per minutes but today SIM is less than 200naira and charges are per second.
ENCOURAGING COMPETITION OR SATELLITE REVOLUTION is the only panacea that can force MULTICHOICE to bow down to the yearnings of the Nigerian people

1 Like

Re: DSTV Price Increase: We Didn’t Disobey Court Injunction~Multichoice by Ameboperoo(m): 10:43am On Apr 21, 2015
I hear o
Re: DSTV Price Increase: We Didn’t Disobey Court Injunction~Multichoice by All4good: 6:51pm On Apr 21, 2015
guass:
Prices of goods in a free market are not determined by the law court, but by the market forces. When ECONET first arrived my territory long ago the SIM card was sold at 10,000naira per one and charges then was per minutes but today SIM is less than 200naira and charges are per second.
ENCOURAGING COMPETITION OR SATELLITE REVOLUTION is the only panacea that can force MULTICHOICE to bow down to the yearnings of the Nigerian people

Just on POINT @ Gauss.

The lawsuit will yield no positive result to the plaintiff because under the terms and condition we (DSTV subscribers) waived our rights to protest price changes and any other changes DSTV may deem fit.

Only the kind of competition, the entrant of GLO into the telecoms industry brought about, can bailout Nigerian subscribers. With serious competition we will see DSTV introducing PAY AS YOU USE and other customer friendly offers.
Re: DSTV Price Increase: We Didn’t Disobey Court Injunction~Multichoice by purplekayc(m): 11:42am On May 01, 2015
illiad:
Price Increase: We Didn’t Disobey Court Injunction –MultiChoice

April 16, 2015

John Ugbe, Managing Director, MultiChoice Nigeria

Multichoice Nigeria Limited, owners and operators of DStv, has described as inaccurate publications, news reports
and commentaries on various media platforms that it disobeyed an interim injunction restraining it from enforcing
the increase in subscription rates for its programmes bouquet.
The position of the pay TV company was contained in a statement signed by Mrs. Kemi Shaba of the MultiChoice Legal Department on Thursday.
The statement noted that as at 2 April, when the Federal High Court granted the orders of interim injunction, the price increase had already taken effect, having commenced on 1 April 2015.

“The status quo as at 2 April 2015 when the order was made was that the prices had already been increased,” the statement issued in Lagos read.
“MultiChoice thus reiterates that it is not in breach of or disobeying the order of interim injunction made by the Federal High Court on 2nd April 2015,”
the statement said. It would be recalled that on 2 April,
Justice C.J Aneke of the Federal High Court, Lagos, granted an interim injunction, ordering parties to a suit
challenging the new subscription rates announced by MultiChoice to maintain the status quo and it restrained
MultiChoice from enforcing its planned increase in cost of different classes of viewing or programmes bouquet. The court adjourned hearing in the suit till 16 April (yesterday).

MultiChoice was served with the orders on 8 April.
The statement further explained that that the contract agreement between MultiChoice and all its subscribers
(including the parties who filed the suit) explicitly states that MultiChoice
reserves the right to change prices and channels.
This fact, it added, was not disclosed to the court before the orders of interim injunction was obtained.
The statement also said as a result, MultiChoice’s lawyers, on Thursday, filed processes challenging the court’s jurisdiction to entertain the matter and make the order of interim injunction of 2 April.
The company’s lawyers have similarly filed processes seeking to set aside the
interim injunction on several grounds. One of these is whether a court is legally empowered to fix prices for a
private concern such as MultiChoice in a free-market economy, the model that exists in the country.

MultiChoice also insists that its challenge of the jurisdiction of the court
and the application to set aside the order make the interim injunction unenforceable until the determination of the court’s jurisdictional competence.
“When the suit came at the Federal High Court on Thursday, our lawyers raised all these issues before the honourable court and the matter was
adjourned to 5th May 2015 for hearing of the application challenging jurisdiction of the court,” the company said.

MultiChoice maintains that it notified the general public and DStv subscribers that, with effect from 1 April 2015, it
would effect an increase in prices charged for its services.

Source:
www.pmnewsnigeria.com/2015/04/16/price-increase-we-didnt-disobey-court-injunction-multichoice/#14292218731512&{type:load,argument:,result:null}
dont really blame you guys fro taking advantage of the envirionment in which you operrate.
if we had a more fluid cable industry and there were more competitors there would be lesser prices

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