The Guardian (Nigeria)

‘ Telephony service quality can’t be 100% unless...’

ALTON proposes discrimina­tory tariffs, awaits cost- based study

- By Adeyemi Adepetun

TELECOMMUN­ICATIONS operators have said telephony services would only improve if the various challenges confrontin­g the sector are removed.

Speaking under the aegis of the Associatio­n of Licensed Telecoms Operators of Nigeria ( ALTON), the operators said many challenges currently limit the provision of optimal services in the country.

The Chairman, ALTON, Gbenga Adebayo, on a television programme on Channelstv, monitored by The Guardian, at the weekend, admitted that the demand for good quality of service is a fair one, but noted that where operators face the problems they are facing, “it’s difficult to guarantee good quality of service, that’s the truth.

“In the face of all that I have mentioned, it’s a bit difficult to guarantee that there will be 100 per cent availabili­ty of services. From vandalisat­ion to behaviour of public actors, even the behaviour as subscriber­s and the rest of them, it’s a bit difficult.”

Adebayo, an engineer, who disclosed that because of various challenges, the sector was no longer attracting investment­s, stressed that this is more worrisome.

According to him, given what has happened to the economy in the last months, people are no longer investing, including the big players and that could mean that the system will go out of service, the system will become of age, and new things will not happen.

“If you don’t invest in a sector, you can’t talk about the quality of service, you can’t talk about right pricing and the rest of it. “It’s now more worrisome if the sector is not attracting new investment because that means that machines will go old, they will not be replaced, exchanges will go down, they will not be replaced, software will go out of version, they will not be replaced and all of that. So, there are issues that we need to look at holistical­ly. When the public demands good quality services, operators demand support from the government; the government should do its part otherwise sanctions and penalties will not solve the problem.

“You can penalise operators for not meeting the good quality of service index but the fact is that in many cases, these factors are beyond the operators. If you look at the numbers, fibre cuts last year translated to several billions of naira. The cost of replacing that can be ploughed back into rebuilding the infrastruc­ture if that didn’t happen in the first instance. Who cuts the fibre? Contractor­s of government during road constructi­on. We don’t want the gains we have seen in the telecoms sector in the last 20 years reversed,” he stated.

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