We would like to assure customers of all four networks that we are committed to providing high quality of service to our customers. Over the last ten years more than N 1 trillion has been invested in building and enhancing the four mobile networks. In 2012 alone, the four operators will be spending over N 400 billion of further investments in their networks. All four operators are actively competing with each other on quality of service to win the loyalty of existing customers and attract new customers.
We are all equally frustrated and concerned about the failures to meet customer expectations and needs with respect to the quality of service. Nigeria deserves and needs first class telecommunications networks. We thus apologise unreservedly to you, our customers, for those occasions when you have been disappointed or inconvenienced by a lapse or failure to deliver the requisite level of quality of service. We however believe that it is necessary to explain the major challenges we face as operators and ask for your understanding and support.
By the time you are done reading...do you agree with me on this? In all fairness MTN, Airtel, Globacom & Etisalat release Joint Statement is 100% correct when they said that the fines which NCC had asked them to pay will not bring about the desired service quality except the power supply problem in this nation is solved.
The main factor affecting quality of service is the absence of a reliable source of power.
Every single site is powered 24 hours a day, 365 days a year by two diesel Generators and requires regular supply of diesel as well as 24hours security protection. We need to recognise that benchmarking quality of service against countries which are not operating in such an environment is unrealistic.
The second major factor affecting network quality are frequent cuts of fibre networks which link the cell sites. These are frequently malicious in nature. Recently, operators have asked that Telecommunications Infrastructure be declared “Critical National Infrastructure” which would result in enhanced protection for these assets and criminalize the wilful damage of the same.
Another equally worrying development is the recent trend towards indiscriminate closure of sites by Ministries, Departments and Agencies of the Federal, State and Local Governments in pursuit of multiple taxation of telecommunications infrastructure. Finally, the issue of security is a prevalent threat from our operating environment.
We have had particularly unfortunate instances where our employees have been physically assaulted and in some instances killed during site maintenance visit, all in a quest to sustain service quality. We wish to use this medium to call on the NCC, the National Environment Standards and Regulations Enforcement Agency, the Minister of Communication Technology, the National Assembly and the Office of the National Security Adviser to work in harmony to put in place an environment in which we can continue our substantial investments in pursuit of delivering world class telecommunications networks. While we continue to make these investments which will also improve service quality, it needs to be pointed out that in the telecommunications industry, such investments do not yield the requisite improvement in service quality until well after 12 months.
We are therefore concerned that fines will not bring about the desired service quality improvements or offer a lasting solution but will merely deplete essential resources that would otherwise be deployed for network roll out. Also, due to capital-intensive nature of our operators, we are concerned that a regime of sanctions will inevitably erode the confidence of financial institutions and critical partners in the industry. We are also concerned that it could create an atmosphere of anxiety and regulatory uncertainty which is unattractive to investment. We are therefore actively engaging with our Regulator to resolve this issue.
Solutions being explored include ensuring a forward-looking quality of service framework, taking into account pertinent environmental factors affecting service delivery and preserving the capacity of the industry to attract the requisite levels of investment in infrastructure to meet stakeholder expectations. Nigeria deserves and needs world class telecommunications networks. No sector in Nigeria has seen more progress than the telecommunications sector.
We ask for the understanding of all stakeholders as we continue to invest and build the networks to the benefit of all Nigerians.
4 comments:
1st of all, these networks are unrelaible with or with d power system, even when they use their generator,they do these things on purpose bc they feel d they can get away with anything in ds country.secondly,NCC is taking this case bc it affects those in d govt, assuming it wasnt ds issue will not be raised.lastly it is a big shame that they ask them to pay d amt to NCC what about d individuals that were affect, they shld be rewarded with that amt bc they suffered fo it.Shame on the country,power supply is getting worse instead of getting better
The fine shld be paid that will teach them a lesson especially mtn...thieves without guns...i dont like them4 one bit
Xpressurselfshow..i dont agree with on ds one, it 50,50, the power failure is to be blamed 50% while the other 50% is blamed on d network..with all the money they making off Nigerians, they shld have world class generator knowing d kind of unreliable power supply so that they satisfy their customers too
NCC shld fine PHCN too if they want to fine the communication provider
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