Wataniya Palestine gains long-awaited spectrum

sheikh al thani

Qtel chairman Al Thani says that despite repeated setbacks, he is convinced Wataniya Palestine will launch successfully now that spectrum is being allocated

Palestinian’s regulator has advised Wataniya Palestine that spectrum will be allocated, allowing the operator to launch commercial operations after repeated delays since March 2007.

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Orange launches mobile services in Kenya

Telkom Kenya launched GSM mobile services in September becoming the country’s first integrated provider of mobile, fixed-line and Internet services, and was subsequently rebranded to Orange reflecting its majority acquisition by France Telecom late last year.

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Omantel fined US$5.4 million

Omantel acknowledged on September 29 that it had been slapped with a OMR2.1 million (US$5.4 million) fine by Oman’s Telecommunications Regulatory Authority, for failing to register 260 microwave links with the authority.

Qtel slashes data charges by 90 per cent

As rival operator Vodafone Qatar prepares to launch, Qatar’s incumbent and current mobile monopoly, Qtel, slashed data rates by 90 per cent for its mobile broadband services in a highly competitive move late last month.

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Etisalat breaks into India with US$900 mil. acquisition of licensee

Etisalat has finally gained access to the Indian telecoms market, having agreed to acquire a 45 per cent stake in Indian GSM licensee Swan Telecom, at a cost of US$900 million, Comm. can reveal.

Indian woman & mobile Etisalat has spoken of its determined interest in entering the burgeoning mobile market in India for over two years, and the licensing of six new GSM operators in India earlier this year has proved the opportunity to facilitate the actioning of this long-held ambition. 

India has a mobile penetration rate of around 30 per cent, leaving significant scope for further growth 

Swan Telecom is owned by the DB Group, and the Etisalat acquisition again highlights the premiums willing to be paid by the UAE operator in order to enter markets it believes to be of strategic significance. Pan-Indian licences were offered earlier this year at a cost of approximately US$400 million each, and Swan Telecom was not even one of the bidders to acquire such a licence, paying a lesser amount for a concession that extended to 13 of India’s 22 telecoms districts.

Reports in India suggest Etisalat will look to acquire a controlling stake in Swan Telecom amounting to 51 per cent or more, at a later stage, as foreign ownership regulations in India permit foreign ownership of Indian companies up to a level of 74 per cent.

Swan Telecom, which is likely to go to market under the Etisalat brand name, is set to launch commercial services in the first quarter of next year, and the Indian licensee is reported to be in talks with incumbent operators with respect to infrastructure sharing.