วันจันทร์ที่ 23 กรกฎาคม พ.ศ. 2550

CAT Says Regulator Should Have Final Word on Access Charges

News reported on: Thursday, 6 July 2007, 12:24 CDT

By Bangkok Post, Thailand

Jul. 4--The access charge dispute between TOT Plc, DTAC and True Move has taken a turn for the worse for the state telecom enterprise, as its sibling state agency CAT Telecom has decided to refer the issue to the National Telecommunications Commission for final judgment.

Earlier, TOT demanded that CAT Telecom pay access charges, and in turn sue the two mobile operators that hold CAT concessions.

Under the terms of the operators' original concessions, CAT says it could seek compensation worth double what it pays for access charges.

Information and Communications Technology (ICT) minister Sitthichai Pookaiyaudom said the ministry would no longer intervene in the case, and he also doubted that the NTC would want to get involved. He said he and the regulator could later face legal action if their decisions were challenged.

DTAC and True Move
stopped paying network access charges to TOT in November last year, arguing that the new interconnection rates approved by the NTC should take precedence.

TOT claims it is owed six billion baht and CAT has agreed to pay a first installment of 2.4 billion on the mobile operators' behalf.

TOT earned about 14 billion baht last year from access charges and is reluctant to switch to the interconnection system because it believes it will earn less money. Interconnection charges are the amounts operators charge each other for handling calls across different networks.

Tosporn Simtrakarn, senior executive vice-president for corporate strategy of CAT Telecom, said CAT wanted the NTC to interpret the real meanings of access and interconnection charges.

"The decision should be made in the interest of consumers' benefits, not operators," he said.

Since the NTC is a state regulatory body, he said, TOT might need to accept the interconnection charge regulations in line with international standards.

He also said the TOT board should not be afraid of lawsuits over the issue.

By Srisamorn Phoosuphanusorn & Komsan Tortermvasana

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Copyright (c) 2007, Bangkok Post, Thailand

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Source: Bangkok Post

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