Telecom operators worry as Dhaka plans tough law
June 13th, 2010 - 1:29 pm ICT by IANSDhaka, June 13 (IANS) Investors and telecom service operators in Bangladesh are worried at the government’s move to bring in a stringent law that has provision of arrest without warrant, no scope for appeal and a heavy fine, to punish wrongdoers.
The government has moved to amend the telecommunication law to punish telecom operators without giving them scope for challenging the regulator’s decision.
The Bangladesh Telecommunication (Amendment) Act 2010, already approved by the cabinet, will be placed in parliament to have a stringent legal framework for telecom operators.
The bill proposes unilateral changes in clauses in an operator’s licence by the regulator and arrest of telecom stakeholders without any warrant, The Daily Star said Sunday. It also has the provision of slapping a fine of Taka three billion ($43.2 million) as punishment.
It also has a few clauses outlining the way to bring VoIP (voice over internet protocol) business under a legal framework.
If the bill gets through, telecom operators will not have a chance to appeal against the regulator’s decision, the newspaper said quoting unnamed legal experts.
All offences would be considered cognisable and the regulator or police could file a case even on suspicion, and arrest any operator official without a warrant.
Telecommunication penetration is only 34 percent in Bangladesh. More than 56 million people now use mobile service while about 1 million people have access to the internet.
Among the recent entrants in Bangladesh’s telecom field is India’s Bharti Airtel, that acquired stake in Warid Telecom and will be investing in telecom infrastructure.
European Union, International Telecommunication Union (ITU) and investors in telecom sector in Bangladesh had sought the prime minister’s intervention to have a law that will help increase telecom penetration in the country.
Telecom and ICT stakeholders in several meetings with government officials have urged that the provisions of harsh punishment be dropped.
Oddvar Hesjedal, chief executive officer of Grameenphone, said: “We cannot go for appeal against any decision taken by BTRC (Bangladesh Telecommunication Regulatory Commission). This seems unconstitutional.”
Hesjedal said many operators are hesitating to go for 3G (third-generation mobile technology) because of the proposed amendment.
Hasanul Haq Inu, chairman of the parliamentary standing committee on post and telecommunications ministry, said the committee would oppose the proposed amendment.
- Investors worry as Dhaka plans tough telecom law - Jun 14, 2010
- Set up telecom appeal board, says Dhaka parliamentary panel - Jul 06, 2010
- Airtel has unfair advantage, say Dhaka operators - Apr 10, 2011
- Hold Ershad's trial, alliance partners tell Hasina - Sep 08, 2010
- Stick to porting rules, TRAI tells Vodafone - Nov 04, 2011
- Bangladesh World Cup team gets new sponsors - Jan 12, 2011
- Yunus opposes government move to control Grameen Bank - May 26, 2011
- Airtel, Idea, Vodafone asked to stop 3G roaming service - Dec 23, 2011
- Proposed new insurance norms may adversely impact mergers - Jul 03, 2011
- Operators must offer calls at 1 paisa per second plan: TRAI - Apr 20, 2012
- Women's commission wants TV content monitored - Nov 19, 2010
- Dhaka telecom regulator okays Bharti Airtel's entry - Jan 05, 2010
- Spectrum shift to put additional Rs.10,000 crore cost on Vodafone - Apr 30, 2012
- TRAI asks operators to offer per second-billing plan (Lead, Superseding earlier story) - Apr 20, 2012
- PCB sends legal notice to ICC on proposed amendments - May 03, 2011
Tags: amendment act, bharti airtel, clauses, daily star, international telecommunication union, legal experts, legal framework, mobile service, service operators, telecom field, telecom infrastructure, telecom operators, telecom sector, telecom service, telecommunication law, unilateral changes, voice over internet, voice over internet protocol, voip voice over internet protocol, warid telecom