Bursting at the seams

Tanzania is often overshadowed by its East Africa neighbour Kenya; the regional darling with respect to political stability and economic development. Tanzania’s telecoms sector is helping change this perception as a converged licensing framework introduced in 2005 helps the sector grow at a rate that is enviable not just in the region, but across the continentimage

Tanzania has a population of over 40 million, and with a teledensity rate of just 25 per cent as of June 2008, is viewed as possessing strong growth prospects in the telecoms sector

Tanzania is a country of around 40 million inhabitants, and prior to 2005 had teledensity of below 10 per cent. According to the Tanzania Communications Regulatory Authority (TCRA), by June 2008 this percentage had risen to 25 per cent, representing 10.4 million fixed and mobile telecoms users, and the growth rate has no sign of letting up.

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i2 reconsiders MVNO investment

Regional mobile telecoms distributor and reseller i2 is reported to have shelved its plans to participate in the nascent mobile virtual network operator market in the Middle East, having failed to receive the go-ahead to launch services anywhere in the region. The company had been awarded one of two MVNO licences in Jordan, along with Friendi Mobile, but the two licensees have been unable to commercialise an agreement with any of Jordan’s mobile network operators.

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Hostile competition in Nigeria

In response to the Whisper we published last issue, which quoted a source in Nigeria talking up the impact that Nigeria’s branding has had in the country since launching at the end of October 2008, another well-placed Nigerian commentator has contacted Comm. with his view of things on the ground.

This latest commentator believes competition in the Nigerian telecoms space is becoming very intense given the presence of five mobile operators and several very active fixed wireless players.

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