Sunday July 15, 11:48 PM
Sudan's Mobitel urges no more mobile licences
KHARTOUM, July 15 (Reuters) - Sudanese mobile company
Mobitel urged the government on Sunday not to issue a further
mobile phone licence, saying a new competitor might force it to
reconsider a $690 million expansion plan.
Khaled Muhtadi, chief executive of Mobitel, wholly owned by
Kuwait's Mobile Telecommunications Co. (MTC) , told
Reuters he had received reports that the country's telecoms
regulator was preparing to issue another nationwide licence in
the next 12 months.
"If we are going to get competition from yet another mobile
operator then that limits our appetite in terms of spreading
aggressively as we are," Muhtadi said. "We have shared our
concerns with them. We have informed them [the decision] could
backfire."
Sudan's mobile telecoms market grown greatly since a 2005
north-south peace deal ended Africa's longest civil war.
Less than six percent of Sudan's population had a mobile
phone by the end of 2005, according to Jordan-based analysts the
Arab Advisors Group. Just 18 months later, current market
estimates range from 11 to 15 percent and rising.
Liberalisation of the sector coincided with a sharp increase
in revenue from the country's oil industry following the
north-south agreement.
Three mobile operators have licences covering the whole of
Sudan - Kuwait's MTC, South Africa's MTN and Sudani, an
offshoot of the national operator Sudatel. Two small private
companies - Gemtel and NOW - also have licences limited to
Sudan's semi-autonomous south.
Last month, the chairman of Emirates Telecommunications Corp
(Etisalat) told Reuters his company was negotiating
with the Sudanese government over a possible move into the
mobile market.
No one was available for comment on Sunday from Etisalat or
the Sudanese Ministry of Telecoms.
Muhtadi said he met Sudanese telecoms officials to tell them
of the possible consequences of handing out a new licence.
"Our hope is that the government will realise that it may
hurt the investment environment by basically allowing so many
operators into a market such as this."
The company's expansion into the south and hostile
environments like Darfur had so far proved very expensive, he
added.
"When we first arrived, we announced we would be investing
somewhere in the neighbourhood of 500 million euros ($690
million) over the next three to five years. By the end of 2007
we will have invested over 450 million Euros. But now this
becomes something to evaluate - is it worth going further
investing more?"
MTC completed its acquisition of Mobitel from
state-controlled Sudatel in March last year but executives were
taken aback when Sudatel launched Sudani soon afterwards.
Mobitel said it currently had 3.3 million customers in
Sudan, giving it a leading 52 percent share of the existing
market. Muhtadi said his plan was to reach 10 million customers
by 2010.
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