The First To Know eInterCam Group New On Cambodian Business News |
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Mobitel:
New fee Rules Will Hurt Service
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“MobiTel has
killed fixed phones and public phones owned by the state,” the official
said. The problem
cannot, however, be blamed on interconnection fees as much as it can be
blamed on the ministry’s inability to collect its own debt, the same
official said. For every
$0.07 the ministry once paid on calls delivered by mobile phones, it
should have been collecting $0.15 for its services. Under new MPTC
regulations, that fee has been dropped to $0.01. Many of those
calls were made on land line lines within other ministries, which were not
paying their bills, the official said. The MPTC,
acting on proposals from the ministry of Finance, also discontinued
payments to all mobile phone companies for the delivery of calls from land
lines to mobile phone customers. “The result,
and it will begin from Sept 1, will be...a severe decline in the quality
of service between fixed and mobile operators,” Spriggs’letter states. The letter was
not a threat, Spriggs said, but “a continuation of our protest” to the
regulations. “We want the ministry to reconsider,” he said. Regardless of
the letter, the ministry says it has no plans to stray from the
regulations it passed earlier this month, Koy Kim Sea said. The purpose of
the new regulations was to encourage customers to use ministry land lines.
But the government does not have any plans to drop the prices paid for
calls made on its land lines, nor does it have any budget for a
promotional campaign, Koy Kim Sea said. “MPTC will
have to follow the Ministry of Finance’s decisions,” he said. Because of the high costs of fixed lines, the mobile phone industry here has exploded, with every mobile company expanding its services and coverage areas year by year. |
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