Ghana Government is Planning A Merger of AT Ghana with Telecel

2 Min Read

Ghana’s Communication Minister Samuel Nartey George has guaranteed job security for AirtelTigo (AT) staff as the government advances plans to merge the loss-making telco with Telecel Ghana.

Why it matters

AT has been bleeding cash — over $10 million in losses in just eight months — with taxpayers footing the bill. The merger aims to consolidate operations, cut duplication, and build a stronger competitor in Ghana’s crowded telecom sector.

What’s new

  • All 300 permanent AT employees will be retained. “This is not a re-application process. It is a continuation of your contracts,” George told staff.
  • Over 3.2 million AT subscribers are already migrating onto Telecel’s network via national roaming, which the minister said is “98% smooth.”

The plan:

The integration will roll out in three phases:

  1. Technical migration — nearly complete, with roaming already operational.
  2. Human resource alignment — all staff absorbed by end of September.
  3. Commercial restructuring — within 120 days to establish the new company’s framework.

The big picture

Sustaining the merged operator will require $600 million over four years, funded by government through spectrum sales and co-investment from Telecel and partners.

What they’re saying:

  • These losses are funded by taxpayers. That is money that should be building roads, water systems, and schools. We cannot keep pouring public funds into unsustainable operations.” — Hon. Samuel Nartey George

Source: Ministry of Communications (LinkedIn)


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