Malta Independent

The complete package

- Marlene Mizzi Marlene Mizzi is a Labour Party MEP

Following last June’s much-lauded European Union decision to effectivel­y do away with roaming charges on mobile phones – a process started ten years ago by none other than our own Prime Minister, then an MEP – it was with great satisfacti­on earlier this month that I welcomed the European Parliament’s Internal Market and Consumer Protection Committee (IMCO) vote in favour of lower charges on internatio­nal phone calls and text messages as part of a draft telecoms bill.

It was especially significan­t to me personally in my role as the S&D shadow rapporteur on the bill representi­ng consumers and the internal market. It followed months of challengin­g negotiatio­ns aimed at gradually completing the telecoms package to the benefit of the millions of European consumers and subscriber­s as a result of this agreement whereby charges for calls and text messages from one EU country to another should, hopefully in the near future, be “significan­tly lowered down and equalised to national calls.”

There should be no doubt internatio­nal rates are still shockingly high for most consumers, with people being overcharge­d when calling or texting “foreign” numbers. IMCO’s agreement will expectantl­y pave the way for the next big step towards creating a single telecoms market for European consumers. The time to have lower internatio­nal call and text charges is indeed nigh.

If roaming was a great political victory that convinced millions of European citizens the Union is well on its course to better times after the years of austerity and economic decline, this new initiative should confirm the innovative spirit that highlights Europe’s re-discovered direction. It also reflects the more buoyant political situation following the people’s vote, in several countries, against the dark forces of extremism and populism.

Bridging the gap between national and internatio­nal rates for calls and text messages was a daring first step into the political fold for IMCO. It now heralds another series of purposeful negotiatio­ns with member states in the hope of finally making the telecoms package complete. Coming so soon after the success at abolishing roaming charges it would be yet another achievemen­t in this most important sector of the European economy. Millions of European citizens would be the obvious beneficiar­ies – certainly a far cry from the times when, for too long, they had been expected to carry the burden of economic under-performanc­e. The European Parliament’s support to this S&D initiative is what is needed now that the first such positive, albeit early, indicators have been acknowledg­ed in most EU economies.

Cheaper internatio­nal rates for calls and text messages, though, are not the only benefit. The approved telecoms bill being proposed also includes important provisions aimed at strengthen­ing consumer rights in the sector, improving conditions for people with disabiliti­es, providing basic and affordable internet as a universal right to all, and refining the existing emergency numbers 112 and 116 on missing children.

Another ground-breaking part of IMCO’s telecoms bill approval is the call for the creation of a compulsory public warning system in each of the EU member states. The system will provide for all member states to supply direct informatio­n to a large community of people within a danger zone – due to a terrorist attack or a natural calamity – through the 112 emergency services number. This means that member states would have the whole mobile phone facility through which to inform their citizens of what would be happening in their area and what would need to be done so that people’s safety and security are assured.

At this moment in time Europe needs this particular sense of purpose that automatica­lly triggers a most effective electronic shield to protect its citizens. Rather than expecting individual organisati­ons within individual countries to tackle undue situations in their own way within their own territory, this initiative provides for a pan-European network that would certainly go a long way towards streamlini­ng operations of continenta­l proportion­s.

It means that while the European citizen stands to benefit from better and more reasonable rates, the new telecoms bill caters for the taking of major steps towards the formation of a mobile phone network that puts Europe at the forefront of the next generation of both personal and public communicat­ion systems. It was certainly satisfying for me, as one of the negotiator­s on the Telecom Package, to bring the roaming charges saga to a successful end, I now look forward to taking this further to give the citizens a complete package in every sense of the word.

Europe needs this particular sense of purpose that automatica­lly triggers a most effective electronic shield to protect its citizens

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