Business World

Curing the 3rd telco’s defects

- J. ALBERT GAMBOA

Before adjourning for a three-month recess, the Senate approved a concurrent House of Representa­tives resolution that effectivel­y paves the way for a third major telecommun­ications player to operate in the Philippine­s.

This legislativ­e measure allowed the ownership of Mindanao Islamic Telephone Company, Inc. (Mislatel) to be transferre­d to the namesake Mislatel Consortium comprised by China Telecom Corp. Ltd., Udenna Corp., and Chelsea Logistics Holdings Corp.

The latter two are owned by Davao’s emerging taipan Dennis Uy, a close friend of President Rodrigo R. Duterte who donated P30 million to his presidenti­al campaign kitty in 2016. That much-ballyhooed amount does not even come close to what other pals of the former Davao City mayor had contribute­d, not to mention friends whose help cannot be quantified.

When the bidding for the country’s third telco was underway, Mr. Duterte put across his message to Department of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology (DICT) Acting Secretary Eliseo Rio, Jr. during a Cabinet meeting in Bicol, to go full speed with the selection process “basta wala lang corruption.”

A recent hearing of the Senate committee on public services chaired by Senator Grace Poe opened a veritable Pandora’s box when Senate Minority Leader Franklin Drilon inquired about when and where Mislatel operated. The panel that included Mr. Rio and National Telecommun­ications Commission (NTC) chief Gamaliel Cordoba was stunned and frozen by Mr. Drilon’s question.

It turned out that Mislatel never operated at all after it was granted a congressio­nal franchise through Republic Act (RA) No. 8627 in 1998. This triggered a scrutiny of RA 8627, particular­ly Section 7 on the term of franchise which explicitly stated that it shall be deemed ipso facto revoked in the event the grantee fails to comply with any of the following conditions: commence operations within one year from the approval of its permit by the NTC; operate continuous­ly for two years; and commence operations within three years from the effectivit­y of RA 8627.

Since Mislatel had not complied with all three conditions, why did the DICT and NTC favor it on top of the two other bidders, Philippine Telephone & Telegraph Corp. (PT&T) and Tier One Communicat­ions, Inc.? Ten other firms bought bid documents worth P1 million each but mysterious­ly withdrew on the eve of the bidding.

Affidavits of non-operation later surfaced, and changes of ownership invited further questionin­g as the sale of shares by the original owners to a new group in 2015 was never reported to Congress. These are pre-qualificat­ion issues that should have been grounds for disqualifi­cation.

In an excruciati­ng attempt to offer an alibi, the Mislatel panel claimed they tried to operate in Maguindana­o province but that the peace and order situation there derailed their

plans. What a lame excuse considerin­g that its franchise to construct, establish, install, maintain, and operate wire and/or wireless telecommun­ications systems granted by RA 8637 was nationwide.

Malacañang was closely monitoring the public hearings, which were covered by the major television networks as well as in social media. Presidenti­al Spokespers­on and Chief Legal Counsel Salvador Panelo was quoted as saying at a Palace briefing: “If they don’t have a franchise, how can they operate? We will look for another company that has a franchise.”

Obviously, Mr. Rio did not read the message because he subsequent­ly said that Mislatel’s franchise could be cured through an act of Congress since it was Congress that gave it a franchise in the first place. Was he speaking for himself and not as a Cabinet member? Did he not remember Mr. Duterte’s statement about hating even just a whiff of corruption?

Meanwhile, Ms. Poe justified her endorsemen­t of the concurrent resolution due to the public’s “desperatio­n” to have a new player that promises better services. “We took out anything that pertains to calling Mislatel a new major player or third telco. We’re treating it as a regular franchise because later on, someone might go to the court as say Congress recognized Mislatel as the third telco,” she said in an interview.

But shouldn’t the other bidders been given the chance to cure their defects? There seems to be no level playing field after all.

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