Philippine Daily Inquirer

3rd telco urged to partner with rivals

DICT’s Rio urges firms to work out a mutually beneficial business arrangemen­t

- By Miguel R. Camus @miguelrcam­usINQ

The head of the Department of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology (DICT) wants the prospectiv­e third telco to work with existing broadband operators and even vanquished rivals following a bruising selection process that is now morphing into a legal battle.

Eliseo Rio Jr., acting secretary

of the DICT, issued a statement through his Facebook page that appeared to suggest a “win-win” solution between provisiona­l winner Mislatel Consortium and disqualifi­ed bidders that have filed or are set to file lawsuits.

In his social media post, Rio urged Mislatel, a venture between Davao-based businessma­n Dennis A. Uy’s Udenna Corp. and China Telecom, to use “all existing facilities” of other players such as Converge ICT Solutions and even those of disqualifi­ed bidders Philippine Telegraph and

Telephone Corp. (PT&T), backed by businessma­n Salvador Zamora II, and Sear Consortium, whose investors include Ilocos politician Luis “Chavit” Singson.

On Nov. 16, PT&T announced that it filed a case before the Supreme Court to overturn its disqualifi­cation while Sear Consortium said it would pursue a case against Mislatel’s telco franchise holder, known as Mindanao Islamic Telephone Co., for breach of contract.

Rio later told the Inquirer in an interview that he hoped that

all the operators could work out a mutually beneficial business arrangemen­t.

“I think they can all work together and be winners,” Rio said. He cited the existing cable facilities of Converge and PT&T as well as Sear’s plan to use a broadband satellite to provide services across the country.

Based on its proposal throughout the government’s five-year commitment period, Mislatel offered to spend P258 billion to build a telco network, cover 84 percent of the country’s population and

bring up the minimum average internet speed to 27 Megabits per second on its first year, going up to 55 Mbps in the succeeding years.

“Mislatel made a commitment to greatly improve our telecommun­ication industry that can bring us at par with Singapore,” Rio said, adding that the third telco would be facing tough penalties such as the forfeiture of its multibilli­on-peso performanc­e bond and return of awarded radio frequencie­s if it repeatedly breaches its commitment­s.

TheDICT head made the statement on the eve of the potential confirmati­on of Mislatel as the new major player that will compete with incumbents PLDT Inc. and Globe Telecom, whose services were earlier criticized by President Duterte. With no appeals left to review, the NTC en banc is free to issue an order confirming Mislatel as the third telco. It will then be subjected to a maximum 90-day post-qualificat­ion review.

As of last week, both Sear and PT&T said they would take their grievances to the courts.

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