The Borneo Post

Liberalisa­tion answer to cheap Internet, says CM

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MELAKA: It is possible to provide cheap and widely available high- speed telecommun­ication and multi-media service in Sarawak if the cost of building the infrastruc­ture and operation could be reduced, said Chief Minister Datuk Patinggi Abang Johari Tun Openg.

He expressed his belief that this could be done if there was a liberal policy in the use of existing and future infrastruc­ture that would allow multi-players’ participat­ion in the provision of such service.

“If the price is high (and) not within the affordabil­ity of the users, they won’t change to digital ( platforms). So this has to be done through multi-player (approach),” he said.

The chief minister was speaking at the closing of a retreat for Sarawak heads of department­s and senior officers at leading hotel here yesterday.

About 170 officers took part in the three- day retreat primarily to chart the way forward in Sarawak’s quest to leapfrog from a convention­al to a digital economy.

Earlier, State Secretary Tan Sri Datuk Amar Mohammad Morshidi Abdul Ghani presented a resolution that had been the result of labs covering 17 areas tailored towards achieving the goal of transforma­tion towards a digital economy.

Deputy Chief Minister Datuk Amar Douglas Uggah Embas was also present at the ceremony.

Abang Johari pointed out that existing Sarawak Energy Berhad (SEB) high voltage towers, which carry fibre optics cables, should be open for use to other telcos as a practical solution to reduce the cost of providing fast Internet in the State.

It would be a waste of resources not to optimise the use of SEB towers to carry fibre optics cables to transmit large volume of data which is vital to support a digital economy, he added.

He said the soon-to-be-launched

If the price is high (and) not within the affordabil­ity of the users, they won’t change to digital (platforms). So this has to be done through multi-player (approach).

Sarawak Multimedia Authority ( SMA) will be the agency to integrate and govern the multiplaye­r services.

A similar approach worked in other countries like Estonia where the multi-player environmen­t had successful­ly allowed 4G Internet to be widely available, he told the participan­ts of the retreat.

He expressed confidence that the liberalisa­tion policy, once put in place, would help to greatly reduce the cost of providing a state-wide Internet infrastruc­ture and internatio­nal gateways to the outside world.

An allocation of RM1 billion from the state coffers was approved in the last State Legislativ­e Assembly sitting and an additional RM500 million would come from the federal government to provide high-speed Internet infrastruc­ture in the state.

He reiterated that the state had to capitalise on digital technology to transform itself into a digital economy as the traditiona­l incrementa­l approach would not put the state on par with the digitalise­d economies of the world.

He said Sarawak needed to achieve a GDP growth of six per cent annually in order to become a high-income developed economy by 2030 and the digitalisa­tion of the economy would be a muchneeded enabler.

Datuk Patinggi Abang Johari Tun Openg, Chief Minister

 ??  ?? Abang Johari greets participan­ts as he arrives for the closing ceremony. On his right is Uggah.
Abang Johari greets participan­ts as he arrives for the closing ceremony. On his right is Uggah.

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