Turkcell: Never A Dull Moment

 | Sep 12, 2012 01:57AM ET

There is never a dull moment when owning Turkish telecom provider Turkcell Iletisim Hizmetleri (TKC). As I’ve highlighted in recent articles, the company is still embroiled in a multi-year, intercontinental boardroom struggle that would rival a daytime soap opera for melodrama and intrigue.

Two rival shareholder factions are fighting for control, and after bouncing around courtrooms in Turkey and the Caribbean, the case is now being reviewed by Britain’s Privy Council.

Yes, the Privy Council of the Queen of England…for a Turkish mobile phone company. I couldn’t make this up if I wanted to.

And now, Turkcell is involved in another international scandal that involves Iranian espionage, United Nations vote rigging and Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney.

Turkcell is suing South African mobile giant MTN for $4.2 billion over allegations the company won contracts by bribing Iranian officials with promises of weapons and South African support for Iran at the United Nations (see article ). MTN also allegedly helped the Iranian regime spy on its own citizens.

No, this isn’t a movie script. It’s business as usual in this part of the world, though the dispute has managed to spill over into U.S. politics. One of President Obama’s chief advisors took $100,000 from MTN to deliver speeches, leading Republicans to allege that the President has an Iranian fifth columnist in his ranks. Meanwhile, Mitt Romney is a shareholder in Turkcell, meaning that he has a vested interest in the outcome of the lawsuit against MTN.