De Zambiaanse overheid heeft eindelijk het tarief verlaagd voor de licentie van de internationale gateway van $ 12 miljoen naar $ 350.000. Hierdoor verwacht men meer internationale investeringen in de telecommunicatiesector en kunnen de hoge kosten voor communicatie op een normaler peil komen.
Door deze verlaging komt het in de buurt van de regionale buren. In Kenia is dit $ 214.000 en in Uganda $50.000. Beide landen hebben een sterke toename in investeringen gezien.
Private mobile operators in Zambia and other telecom sector stakeholders — including Zain, the World Bank, and the U.N. Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD). — had been expressing concern at the high cost of doing business in Zambia.
The decision to lower gateway fees comes in the wake of the government sale of Zamtel, which controlled the gateway and charged private operators high fees for its satellite system. Zamtel has been sold to Libya’s LAP Green Networks in a bid by the Zambian government to level the playing ground in international call services.
“The move by the Zambian government would enhance the performance of the telecom sector because high tariffs put pressure on customers’ pockets,” said Walter Tapfumanei, communications officer for Africa Agency for ICT Development.
Despite the reduction in international connection fees, the high user tariffs are not expected to decrease anytime soon, since the Zambian government has not come up with a law to govern the use of the gateways. Service providers are still using the old tariffs for international calls as they wait for the enactment of the new law that the Zambian government has drafted to guide service providers on the use of the gateways. The new law is yet to be presented to Parliament for approval, which might take months.
[IDG Magazines]
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