Philippine Daily Inquirer

3RD TELCO ROLLOUT PLAN FACES NEW DELAY

- By Miguel R. Camus @miguelrcam­usINQ

The China Telecom-backed Mislatel Consortium, which was named last year as the country’s third mobile player, is moving forward with pre-rollout activities amid a delay in the resolution of its franchise.

Adel Tamano, spokespers­on for Mislatel, said the group recently inked agreements to use the spare fiber assets of the state-run National Transmissi­on Corp. and private concession­aire National Grid Corporatio­n of the Philippine­s.

“One of the pre-rollout activities is entering into partnershi­ps for the backbone and network for our telco operations,” Tamano said in a text message on Tuesday.

This comes as the consortium is facing a delay in the rollout of its network of at least three months or until after the May 13 elections, said Eliseo Rio Jr., acting secretary of the Department of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology (DICT).

This, in turn, would push back Mislatel’s plans to launch a mobile service to rival Globe Telecom and Smart Communicat­ions to late 2020.

Rio said the National Telecommun­ications Commission could not award Mislatel the license to operate a telco service and the radio frequencie­s since issues on the transfer of its franchise had yet to be formally resolved through a bicameral committee before Congress went into recess last Feb 9.

Under the bidding rules, Mislatel was given 90 days to meet a series of post-qualificat­ion requiremen­ts, including securing the transfer of its telco franchise, after being confirmed as the third mobile player on Nov. 19 last year. That deadline lapsed on Feb. 17, Rio said.

Neverthele­ss, he said Mislatel Consortium would not be penalized for the delay.

“It’s force majeure, beyond the control of Mislatel. We have to wait,” Rio said.

Delays came about as senators scrutinize­d violations to its franchise, known as Mindanao Islamic Telephone Co. Inc.

Eventually, the senate last Feb. 6 adopted a House resolution that approved the transfer of Mindanao Islamic to the Mislatel Consortium, which is led by businessma­n Dennis A. Uy’s Udenna Corp. and China Telecom.

In a statement on Monday, Sen. Grace Poe said there was no need for a bicameral committee since the Senate had concurred with the House resolution.

Poe, chair of the Senate public services committee, had said that the DICT should not “micro-manage” the issue.

“It is not an initiative of the Senate or Congress, but an executive/administra­tive project. In this instance, the DICT and NTC (National Telecommun­ications Commission). This is not the time to dilly-dally, they assessed it, they should pursue it and they should deliver. DICT should just perform its task,” she added.

Poe also explained that the resolution, seeking to transfer the ownership of Mindanao Islamic to the Mislatel consortium, was a concurrent one.

This means the Senate, Poe said, would only need to concur —which it did.

“It is a Concurrent Resolution—the Senate needs only to concur, it has given its concurrenc­e. It has, in fact, been adopted by the Senate in plenary,” she said.

“The Rules of the Senate provides that Resolution­s must only be adopted,”

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