Sunday, June 3, 2012

No roaming charges in new telecom policy

(IANS) / 1 June 2012



 The cabinet on Thursday approved a new telecom policy that seeks to do away with roaming charges across the country and simplifies the licencing policy, Telecom Minister Kapil Sibal said on Thursday.



“Affordability of the consumers is the core of our policy,” Sibal told reporters after a cabinet meeting presided over by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.
Sibal said the new policy aims at free roaming facility throughout the country.
The minister said the new policy seeks to provide a predictable and stable policy regime for a period of nearly 10 years.  The new policy called National Telecom Policy-2012 will replace more than a decade old legislation.

“The policy envisions providing secure, reliable, affordable and high quality converged telecommunication services anytime, anywhere for an accelerated inclusive socio-economic development.” according to an official statement released after the cabinet meeting. “The main thrust of the Policy is on the multiplier effect and transformational impact of such services on the overall economy,” the statement said. The policy will be operationalised by bringing out detailed guidelines, as may be considered appropriate, from time to time.


It will enable smooth implementation of the policies for providing an efficient telecommunication infrastructure taking into account the primary objective of maximising public good by empowering the people of India, the statement said. “The policy will further enable taking suitable facilitatory measures to encourage existing service providers to rapidly migrate to the new regime in a uniformly liberalised environment with a level playing field,” it said.

1 comment:

  1. Very very late implementation. Several other countries never had roaming charges. Only Indian customers have to shell out money for something which the telecom operators spent nothing. Useless and corrupt govt. taking such slow steps targetting elections which is causing hardship to common man. Jai Hind!!!

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