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Altice does not feel welcome in Portugal

alticeLogoThe Portuguese co-founder of Altice has criticised Portugal’s government and has made the error of assuming that, because the French-owned group owns significant assets in the country, it is above the rules and regulations that govern domestic companies.

Altice’s Armando Pereira said today that the Portuguese government "often does not see the importance" of the French group's investment in Portugal and said that he senses that the government “does not like” the company that bought PT Portugal two years ago and currently is buying the company that owns Media Capital SA along with its significant Portuguese media assets.

On the eve of a workers’ strike by PT workers and former workers, over the transfer of contracts to Altice subsidiaries, Pereira said that "Altice invests in Portugal in a very important way,” referring to the PT purchase and the July 14th €440 million purchase by Altice to buy Prisa, which gives it control of Media Capital SGPS, SA, which in turn owns tvi and other significant Portuguese media assets.

Some already have demanded that the Portuguese government blocks this deal, notably the secretary general of the Communist Party, Jerónimo de Sousa, who said "it takes courage and determination to choose between national interests the power of a multinational."

The coordinator of the Left Block, Catarina Martins, also questioned the deal, namely Altice's plan, as part of the tvi  deal, to fire more than 3,000 PT employees.

Catarina Martins said that "a country that takes itself seriously can not allow this to happen."

Armando Pereira said he did not understand the opposition to the deal, but assured the country that the Altice group will continue to invest in Portugal and already runs 12 call centres.

The prime minister also has expressed concern about the future of PT, is worried about sackings and has pointed to Altice’s "serious failures" as one of the owners of SIRESP SA which provides the flawed technology that failed during the Pedrógão Grande fire in the district of Leiria, which caused 64 deaths.

The Regulatory Entity for Social Communication (ERC) has to decide on the Prisa deal as it affects tvi. The final decision on the takeover will be made by the Competition Authority.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Comments  

0 #2 Norman. 2017-07-23 14:14
Very perceptive of Mr. Pereira. Since Altice took over the quality of 'customer service' (thats a joke) at Meo has dropped from 'Very poor' to 'Disgusting'. Previously when I called about our Internet being down again (about every ten days) I got an answer within a couple of minutes and usually got an English speaking technician (agreed - my fault my Portuguese is not good enough). Last week it took one hour twenty minutes in the queue listening to very bad 'music' before the phone was answered, this morning I gave up after 25 minutes - life is too short. No way should this abysmal company be allowed to take over anything else. Let alone the disgrace of the undoubted disguised staff reduction that will take place. Thee is great cause to be concerned.
0 #1 Tom Hardcastle 2017-07-21 17:39
Surely what lies behind this is the need to control the messenger. As we see today with the continuous attempted prosecution of the New York Times feature writer blamed for crashing the Portuguese economy in 2010 and triggering the arrival of the Troika.

Letting these broadcasters get a whiff of genuine free speech and all sorts of demons get let out. Will it lead to us watching programmes on Portuguese TV that actually dig deep when raking over the recent past? A period that is closed to scrutiny, most obviously in the Portuguese school text books. Thousands of families lost loved ones during the Salazar Pogrom's against leftward leaning types and anyone else who got in the way. Including MP Catarina Martins Great Uncle - a doctor shot by the Portuguese secret police for treating the poor at below market rates.

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