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Watchdog summons cell players

Oct 19 2009 09:26

Johannesburg - The Competition Commission has subpoenaed key people at cellphone providers MTN and Vodacom for suspected price-fixing, the Business Report said on Monday.

Commissioner Shaun Ramburuth would not say how many people had been subpoenaed, saying only that the "process of interviewing them is under way".

"I don't want to prejudge the case," he told the newspaper. The allegations of price collusion relate to interconnection fees, which the operators raised by 500% to R1.25 in 2001. This was the same year that newcomer Cell C entered the market. Ramburuth said it had been difficult to find evidence of "explicit collusion".

"Vodacom and MTN set the rate between themselves and in that agreement have a non-discrimination clause, which says that everyone will be charged the same.

"In circumstances like that [the difficulty is to establish] explicit collusion. The situation somehow provided a defence for the cellphone companies, who claim that they did not collude and that the regulations required them to do that," said Ramburuth.

Recently, the government has intervened to try and get high interconnection rates lowered and the Independent Communications Authority of SA is meeting the operators this week.

- Sapa

 

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Jakes
Oct 19 2009 14:01 Report this comment

The government must regulate these companies. I read that in India you pay 10cents a minute when making a call, whats our rate? R2,30? Surely government can intervene and bring an end to this. The interconnection must be fixed at below 40cents and we want a real proper reduction in the call costs. We all know we being ripped off.
 
anon
Oct 19 2009 13:50 Report this comment

We are paying very high fees for cellphone calls, what is more expensive a landline exchange with a copperline that goes to your block to a streetbox on the coner from where the copper line goes all the way to your house. Cellphone towers emit signal that is sent and recieved between the tower and your cellphone so there are no lines. Telephone exchanges also have backup batteries so does Cellphone towers. So why is landlines cheaper than cellphone calls?
 
Christopher
Oct 19 2009 13:23 Report this comment

If the cell companies have met and agreed on prices and they as greedy as it sounds, then you can bet that to keep their high margins in tact, there will be a consequence to pay, be they job losses or some sort of other fees, just wait.
 
Eric
Oct 19 2009 11:50 Report this comment

Interesting that this happens now if you take into account the press release that CellC had in the Raport yesterday. Go CellC!!
 
Alpha Mike Foxtrot
Oct 19 2009 11:30 Report this comment

Why now? Ill tell you why: Because next year hoards of foreigners and truckloads of media will arrive and the true nature of how the public are ripped off will be seen by the world. All I can say is Im glad the World Cup is coming and these spinoffs are the real reason.
 
Dave
Oct 19 2009 11:06 Report this comment

Whatever the reason - it's long overdue. There will be lots of gnashing of teeth and hand wringing as the cell phone companies try and deflect the argument to something else - lets hope the commission sticks the core issue - we have the highest cell phone rates in world!
 
Hugo
Oct 19 2009 10:32 Report this comment

Finally! How long did that take? The Competition Commision responds to public outrage. After telecoms, investigate banking and automotive. Serious pricefixing going on.
 
MP
Oct 19 2009 10:28 Report this comment

Why now? What has taken so long for this investigation to take place? It's because VOD is unbundled from Telkom and the government has no vested interest in it anymore.
 
 
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