Qatari telecoms giant Ooredoo on Friday pledged to introduce
"affordable" phone services to Myanmar next year as it pumps $15 billion
into one of the world's few remaining frontier mobile markets.
The
firm, which in June along with Norway's Telenor won bids to provide
mobile coverage to a nation where less than 10 percent of the population
has telephone access, should be formally awarded its 15-year 3G licence
by the end of this year.
It will then start to roll out its
mobile services -- including money transfers and weather data for
farmers -- within six months, a company executive told reporters in
Yangon.
"People can use Ooredoo's services next year... we need to
build quickly, not only in cities but also in rural areas," Ross
Cormack said.
Few in Myanmar can currently afford mobile phones
and SIM card fees, which in the past cost about $200, although the
government is now trying to make prices more affordable.
Asked how
calls will be priced -- in a country where about a quarter of the
population live below the national poverty line -- Cormack said: "I
can't say exactly but you will find it attractive and affordable."
In
a statement in July Myanmar's government said Ooredoo had "committed"
to selling SIM cards for about $1.5 and to charging roughly four cents
for off-peak calls.
"We will deliver SIM cards and all the
services at every road-side store and to villages," Cormack said, adding
up to 97 percent of Myanmar's 60 million people will have access to his
company's services within five years.
Mobile coverage in the
former junta-ruled nation is extremely limited, with less than 10
percent of the population enjoying access to a telephone.
The
company, formerly known as QTel, will invest in selling its services at
tens of thousands of outlets across the country, it said, with a focus
on add-ons including mobile money transfers and providing market prices,
weather updates and equipment rental costs to help farmers in remote
areas.
Valid for 15 years, the licences are the first to be
awarded by the formerly junta-ruled nation, and will see the two foreign
firms enter a market once monopolised by a pair of state companies.
source;FOX news
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