Celtel to introduce one network in Ghana

Celtel International, a telecommunications group based in the Netherlands, has declared its intention to invest in Ghana, as well the as likelihood of introducing its mobile phone system that networks countries and eliminates roaming charges.
 
 It is currently undertaking investment studies in the country, which will become the sixth West African country it will be operating in and the sixteenth in Africa.

Once operational in the country, the company will study the network system in other West African countries and decide on when to introduce its unique “One Network” service.

The service, which is currently in use in East Africa (Tanzanian, Uganda and Kenya) makes it possible for a user of a Celtel mobile phone to use the same number in another networked country without paying for roaming surcharges.

The “One Network” is automatically activated once a customer crosses over into the geographic border of any other networked countries without prior registration or new cellular phone chip. The customer can also place calls to any of the networked countries without any restriction.

Dave Hagedorn, Business Development Manager of Celtel, and Khaled Al-Anjiri, Mergers and Acquisitions Specialist from Mobile Telecommunications Company (MTC), the parent company of Celtel, headquartered in Kuwait, are in the country this week to hold talks with investment partners.

Without mentioning the amount to be invested, Mr. Hagedorn told the Times “we are looking at the opportunities and we will be investing substantially.

“We are hopeful that we will start operations in the coming month that Ghana will be the next country for the group,” Mr. Hagedorn added.

He indicated the expansion of their operations to Ghana was in line with their vision to cover the entire continent. Celtel is also operating in Burkina Faso, Chad, DR Congo, Gabon, Madagascar, Malawi, Niger, Nigeria, Congo, Sierra Leone, Zambia and Sudan.

The company intends covering the entire Africa with the “One Network” service by implementing it on a regional basis, he said.

Mr. Al-Anjiri, for his part, said the MTC was committed to investing in infrastructure to offer improved services for customers and also taking advantage of opportunities that could be used to remove barriers between populations and make life better.

Source- http://www.andnetwork.com
 

Uganda: Celtel Takes Over Nigeria’s Vmobile

CELTEL International has fully taken over control of Nigeria’s Vmobile and re-branded it into its famous red and yellow logo along with its brand promise of ‘Making Life Better.’

In a press statement issued recently, the Celtel International Group Chief Executive Officer, Mr Marten Pieters, said Nigeria is a very important market for any serious telecommunications operator in the world.

“Celtel has taken Nigeria seriously right from the days of the license auction. We also tried to acquire Nitel, when it was up for sale, but the more attractive option of buying into Vmobile proved too tantalising to be ignored,” he said.

Celtel’s success in Nigeria underscores the increasing competition among telecom players on the continent for more visibility and business as Africa continues to take leaps into the cyber world.

Re-branding Vmobile, the first mobile network to launch commercial services in Nigeria, follows the acquisition of a controlling stake in the company by Celtel.

The deal, worth $1.005 billion (Shs1.8 trillion), was concluded in May 2006. Officials said the Group plans to do an extensive rollout of the Celtel brand in Nigeria, with investments already hitting more than $700 million (Shs1.2 trillion) being spent to improve network coverage through the erection of 1,000 new base stations and bringing the latest mobile network products to our customers

Celtel offers telecommunications services with mobile licenses covering more than 400 million people, close to half of Africa’s population.

Celtel International is owned by MTC, a leading provider of mobile telecommunications in the Middle East and Africa.

It has more than 15 million customers and operates mobile cellular operations in 14 countries. These include Burkina Faso, Chad, DR Congo, Gabon, Kenya, Malawi, Niger, Sierra Leone, Tanzania, Uganda and Zambia among others.

Source- http://allafrica.com

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Mobile industry in Africa satisfying key consumer needs

While Western mobile companies scratch their heads about how to replicate or adapt the widespread adoption of mobile data services in Japan and Korea, Africa provides another example of how people respond to a great need not new technology. Currently WIZZIT Bank is providing a mobile banking initiative to fulfil the needs of the 14 million South Africans who have no proper access to banks or other financial services. Analysts estimate that up to 60% of the 22 million mobile phone owners would be without bank accounts or easy access to money transfer systems and that WIZZIT would provide these mobile consumers with a significant benefit in becoming economic citizens.

WIZZIT is essentially a new bank that provides its customers with the ability to carry out transfers, pay standing orders, top-up mobile phone credit and take out money. Security is via the usual four digit codes used by other banks and they have relationships with other banking chains allowing you to still do things the usual way. They already have what they call a “cult following” and have set up accounts for farmers to allow the mto send money home or to other family members much more easily.

This kind of banking operation has been made illegal in England and, looking at some of the details more carefully, it is clear that WIZZIT is, if anything, not a business model to follow in all its details, even if it suits the needs of its current target market. First of all, the bank carries out no credit checks, something obviously impossible for some of the citizens who have no credit to check. It takes only 2 minutes to set up an account and the service is also available to schoolchildren, which makes it universal and, to Western minds, inherently suspicious. Uniquely, WIZZIT has a policy to only employ unemployed people and uses them as salespeople to demonstrate and spread their knowledge of the service. You’d be hard pressed to find many people who could have faith in a bank in England or America who followed a similar policy.

It remains to be seen if this service can remain popular and secure but it fundamentally fulfils a glaring need for its customers. It is also just another example of how Africans in general are some of the highest users of WAP technology to access the internet, in particular using their mobiles to access world news sites such as the BBC. Poor fixed-line networks and the high cost of computers have made internet access far more more appealing on mobiles. Fast adoption of 3G Networks and the effciency of cellular network companies as opposed to the government-run telecoms companies have made WAP an internet standard in Nigeria and South Africa.

Again this model is unrepeatable in its details, given the high development and penetration of broadband in Western companies, whcih effectively raised the bar for mobile phones and cannibalised the potenital market. What is noticeable is that in both cases mobile phones have fulfilled needs otherwise uncatered for or under-provided through other media (Banking and News-provision respectively). It is this aspect of recognising useful gaps in the market that needs to be worked on by operators in developed economies, where data aservices are more likely to enhance or improve existing habits and behaviours rather than create new needs.

Once networks provide this kind of longed for service to their customers they are likely to see increased goodwill and loyalty that has previously eluded them. As an unlikely example of this relationship developing, witness the woman in Sierra Leone who named her new-born son “Celtel” after the local mobile operator that allowed her to contact a midwife in time to deliver her baby. Admittedly, this is unlikely to happen in Europe (“We’ve decided to call her “Orange”!”) but at least we can get to the stage where we don’t resent or ignore them.

Source- http://www.w2forum.com

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Huawei helps Comium drive new wave of Mobile Telecom Services in Cote d’Ivoire

Delhi, Delhi, India, 2006-09-20 (IndiaPRwire.com) — [New Delhi - September 20, 2006] Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd (Huawei), a leader in providing next generation telecommunications network solutions for operators around the world, has been selected by Comium Mobile, a leading total telecommunications services group and West Africa’s leading mobile service provider, to build its GSM network in Cote d’Ivoire. The contract includes providing a full turnkey GSM, GPRS, 3G and Intelligent Network in Cote d’Ivoire.

The project adopts Huawei’s innovative EnerG GSM solution and new generation GSM Dual Density BTS. Huawei’s EnerG GSM solution first introduces 3G technology to GSM network, enabling the operator to enhance the efficiency and performance of its network, while helping the operator greatly reduce OPEX and CAPEX. Huawei’s new-generation dual-density BTS features both high density and receiving sensitivity capabilities, and is widely adopted by GSM operators globally.

As a leading multinational telecommunications services provider in West Africa, Comium Mobile recently won license to build a new mobile network in the country and thinks much of this GSM network. In consideration of three year’s successful cooperation with Huawei in Sierra Leone and Liberia, Comium Mobile chooses Huawei to deploy the competitive GSM network again. The Ivorian telecoms and mobile GSM market is set to witness exponential growth and Comium Mobile is positioning itself to bring tangible and sustainable value to its customers.

Comium Mobile is committed to go commercial live by 1st quarter 2007. With a population of over 17 million, and a mobile penetration rate of 13.5%, Comium aims to grow the market with the introduction of innovative products and services, highly competitive and cost-efficient pricing strategy, and superior service quality in terms of coverage, customer care, and distribution channels.

“Comium is aggressively pursuing the acquisition of new licenses across West Africa. The success we are enjoying in Liberia and Sierra Leone is inspiring us to grow regionally by providing differentiated customer experience through the provision of innovative products and services including affordable GSM solutions, broadband internet and international voice service offerings. Huawei is an enabling partner for this mission with its technically advanced solutions that help us deliver on our vision to bring new means for the human communication needs,” said Dr. Nizar Dalloul, Chairman and CEO of the Comium Group.

“There is increasing demand for a wider range of telecom applications and services in West Africa,” said Mr. Ding Shaohua, General Vice President of Huawei Technologies. “We have been working with Comium Mobile since 2004 on the development and implementation of its GSM networks in Sierra Leone and Liberia and this new contract cements the relationship between the two companies. Comium Mobile is an ambitious operator in the region with great focus and growth potential. We are jointly working with their world-class team to help them meet their aggressive targets and to bring the latest telecom solutions to West Africa.”

With its vision of enriching people’s life through communications, Huawei continues to make investment in GSM technology innovation. Huawei’s EnerG GSM solution has been adopted by telecom operators in over 80 countries, serving more than 120 million subscribers across the globe. With a total deployment of GSM BTS reaching over 500,000 TRXs worldwide, Huawei has accumulated extensive experience and expertise in the construction of large-scale and densely populated area networking, as well as planning, optimization and performance management of networks, winning the respect and trust of major global telecom operators.

Source- http://www.indiaprwire.com

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Sierra Leone: Pan African Mobile Company Invests $70 Million

Celtel, a Pan African mobile company that operates in 15 countries in Africa, and the leading mobile company in Sierra Leone has devised strategies that will put it far ahead of others .

The current tariff reduction is one of the few strategies. Celtel says they have invested $70 million in Sierra Leone and plans are underway to invest more.

Celtel started operating in Sierra Leone in the late 90s, at a time when the war was still going on the country.

The managing director of Celtel Mr. Ted Setiphuri says Celtel has been providing effective coverage in the country, adding that all the 12 districts in the country now have access to the company’s network.

“Celtel has positioned itself to respond to the needs of the people in Sierra Leone”, he says.

According to him, “Celtel is No.1 in terms of quality and reliability”.

He says the reduction in the tariff is to make the company’s facility accessible even to the least man in society.

The permanent secretary in the ministry of transport and communications Mr. Abdul Rahman Wurie says the tariff reduction marks “another milestone in the long and arduous journey of Celtel that started in the 90s”.

He adds, “It seems they (Celtel) always take the lead and others follow”. He however warns that it should not make Celtel to rest their shoulders on the oars.

“In terms of service delivery, your quality is top”, he says. He however assures that government continues to provide a level playing field to all mobile operators in the country. He says the company has provided employment opportunities for many in the country.

The Marketing Manager of Celtel Mr. Bernard Sisay jokingly says, “The bomber is now ready to fight” apparently referring to the company’s determination to climb to the topmost rung of the success ladder and leave the others far behind. He says the 50-units top up card that have been introduced, which is the cheapest in the country, is geared towards “making life better”.

We not only have the lowest tariffs, but we also have the widest coverage”, he says.

Five mobile companies are presently operating in the country.

Sources say more companies abroad have applied for licences. They include Eriksson.

Source- http://allafrica.com

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