Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Saudi Arabia set to lift ban on internet calls

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Saudi Arabia will remove its ban on internet phone calls, a government spokesman said, in a bid to stimulate online business as the kingdom looks to boost non-oil revenue.

All online voice and video call services such as Microsoft’s Skype and Facebook’s Whatsapp that satisfy regulatory requiremen­ts will become accessible at midnight (2100 GMT), Adel Abu Hameed, spokesman for the telecoms regulator CITC said on Twitter yesterday.

The lifting of the ban could pinch Saudi Arabia’s three main telecoms operators - Saudi Telecom Co (STC), Etihad Etisalat (Mobily) and Zain Saudi - which earn substantia­l revenue from internatio­nal phone and text calls made by the millions of expatriate­s living in the kingdom.

The policy reversal comes as part of the government’s broad reform programme to diversify revenue sources as oil prices have hit the finances of the world’s top exporter.

“Digital transforma­tion is one of the key kick-starters for the Saudi economy, as it will incentiviz­e the growth of internetba­sed businesses, especially in the media and entertainm­ent industries,” a separate statement from the informatio­n ministry said.

“Access to VOIP (voice over internet protocol) will reduce operationa­l costs and spur digital entreprene­urship – that’s why it is such an important step in the Kingdom’s internet regulation,” it said.

The kingdom and its Gulf Arab neighbours have been concerned by the use of secure internet communicat­ion - which experts say is harder to monitor - especially by activists and militants.

Gulf Arab states, except the island kingdom of Bahrain, were mostly spared the “Arab Spring” mass protests often organised over the Internet which roiled much of the region in 2011.

They avoided the civil wars which largely followed but face deadly bombing attacks by Islamic State and militancy by fringes of their Shi’ite Muslim population­s they say is fuelled by Iran. The authoritie­s will continue to regulate the Internet in order to restrict content that violates the kingdom’s laws such as extremist material, pornograph­y and gambling sites, the informatio­n ministry added.

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