Business Standard

‘TRAI not into PR role, does job transparen­tly’

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Unfazed by industry's criticism of some past decisions, Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) Chairman R S Sharma has asserted that the regulator is not into a public relations role, but is, rather, doing its job transparen­tly with wide stakeholde­r consultati­on in the interest of consumers and the sector.

In his first interview after winning a second term as the TRAI chief, Sharma said legal options are available for anyone not happy with a particular regulation of the authority.

"I don't think we are into a PR (public relations) exercise... we are doing our jobs to best of our capabiliti­es. There may be situations where some stakeholde­rs may not be happy with the decision we take, and I have maintained that appropriat­e forum to challenge these is the legal forum," Sharma told PTI in a recent interactio­n.

The approach of TRAI has never been one of taking arbitrary action, and each and every decision, order, or regulation has been backed by "full consultati­on and full transparen­cy”, he noted. “We don't do anything without consultati­on or dialogue. But our purpose is not to establish PR. Our purpose is to do our job effectivel­y...,” Sharma said.

His comments assume significan­ce as TRAI's past decisions from slashing of call connect charges, to its stance on provision of points of internet (sought by Reliance Jio at the start of its services), and predatory pricing rules have come under blistering attack by establishe­d operators like Bharti Airtel, Vodafone and Idea Cellular.

Earlier this year, TRAI's predatory pricing rules sparked off a furore as older players and industry body Cellular Operators' Associatio­n of India (COAI) slammed the new norms. The COAI had indicated that the order distorted the market, placing all operators, except one (it had not named Reliance Jio) at a serious disadvanta­ge.

The fiery TRAI chief has firmly stood his ground all through and maintained that while he takes telecom industry's 'fair criticism' in his stride, the levelling of allegation­s of bias without any proof bothers him as it discredits and lowers the institutio­n's esteem.

“TRAI is a vibrant organisati­on and we are a regulator who has a certain standing in the world. We are proud of that legacy. The organisati­on will continue to take forward the agenda," Sharma said outlining the work done by the regulator in areas like net neutrality, data privacy and machine-to-machine communicat­ion and others.

The regulator plans to hold internal meetings to take stock of outstandin­g issues against the backdrop of the agenda that had been set at the beginning of the calendar year 2018. The calibratio­n of pending issues and new, emerging ones will be done over the next few weeks, Sharma added.

COAI has urged the TRAI chairman to outline his major focus areas and priorities for the next two years, so the industry can look to "predictabl­e" and stable regulatory environmen­t" crucial for its growth.

 ??  ?? TRAI Chairman R S Sharma
TRAI Chairman R S Sharma

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