Related Articles
Top Stories
Feb 13 2012 07:58
Greek lawmakers have approved a new round of drastic austerity measures after a long day of street battles between police and protesters left dozens injured.
Feb 13 2012 07:41
A reader gets advice on quick returns on a lump sum.
Feb 12 2012 15:59
Moral hazard, financial weapons of mass destruction, a huge mess - these were the words used by a founder member to sum up the collapse of the Pinnacle Point Group.
Johannesburg - Cellphone users should see the first cost cuts by the end of November, the communications department said on Sunday.
Spokesperson Tiyani Rikhotso confirmed various media reports thatthe department wanted to see interconnection rates - which
cellphone operators pay each other for switching a call between
networks - to drop by 30c, from R1.25 to R0.95 by the end of
November.
"The discussion [with operators] has been taking place for quite a while and there hasn't been any movement," said Rikhotso.
"Hence we as a department would like to see this issue resolved as soon as possible."
Over the next year the department would like to see the
interconnection fee cut to 60c.
"There is no disagreement as far as the issue [of needing to cut costs] is concerned. What we are dealing with is the figure [by how much calls are cut] and by when we need to slash the costs now."
Rikhotso said the department would ask the Independent
Communications Authority of South Africa (Icasa) to issue a
directive to operators on how much and when to cut costs.
"It needs to issue some directive... It issues licences so
therefore should have the power to determine what kind of charges [are made for calls]," Rikhotso said.
Parliament's communications portfolio committee was expected to
meet cellphone operators on Tuesday.
This follows from last month's call, during a National Assembly
communications committee meeting, for Icasa to use its powers to
set a concrete timetable for this.
At the time ANC MP Johnny de Lange proposed the cellphone
industry appear before the committee to explain the problems it
faced, the costs it charged, and to account for the profits made.
South Africa's cellphone rates are among the highest in the
world.
- Sapa