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set, for a minimum of two units per cell site in a country whose
public power supply system has remained comatose for ages now? How
do you say thank you to an operator that in some cases, provide
access road to its sites to allow for provision of services in localities
where public infrastructure is virtually non-existent?
It is rather disheartening that instead of government burying its
face in shame on account of its inability to live up to its social
contract responsibility, it has resorted to employing all manner
of arbitrary and indiscriminate policies under the guise of charges,
fines and levies, to undermine the patriotic efforts of the operators
at improving quality of service that has for long been the challenge
in the country.
From all indication, the horizon is getting hazy. And unless government
and its agencies allow reason and wisdom to prevail, the country
may yet, take some avoidable retrogressive steps in its telecom
annals. As it stands now, even in spite of the huge profits they
are posting on monthly basis, network operators are gradually being
forced to close their cell sites, base stations and other telecom
infrastructure owing to what ALTON alleges to be 'continuous extortion
and high insecurity of lives and infrastructure.'
There is still room for the immediate resolution of this 'landlord/tenant'
imbroglio especially in the Lagos area so as to nip this ominous
signs in the bud. Already, ALTON appears to be holding out the olive
branch going by what its President, Gbenga Adebayo told the media
recently:
“Our members' stance is predicated on the need to ensure
that there is ample justification for applicable service charges,
which should be structured to consider service provision cost in
peculiar localities and to ensure that subscribers in law-abiding
and co-operative areas are not made to suffer from the impact of
increase cost of service provision foisted on network service providers
in less friendly places.”
This issue should not be allowed to deteriorate further.
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