GoK-Telkom-France Telecom agreement
Dear all, I have been quite intrigued by the negotiations between GoK and France Telecom over their Telkom acquisition that were covered nicely consistently by the East African in recent weeks. The latest instalment here: http://www.theeastafrican.co.ke/news/How%20the%20French%20got%20their%20way%... The article states that GoK and France Telecom have come to an agreements under which - GoK will pay the USD10m fee for the 3G license for Telkom - in that context, I'd be curious to know if CCk will refund USD15m to Safaricom as, from what I understand, they had initially promised to do if the license fee will be lowered from its initial USD25m? - GoK will clear overdue bills to Telkom, contributions to the pension fund, overdue payment to KBC: no issue with these since it appears fair enough that GoK clears liabilities that precede the privatisation (never mind the question why GoK/parastatals have been let to accumulate such obligations in the first place). - Telkom to manage and control GoK's 20% stake in TEAMS. - France Telecom to be granted an exclusive operational and maintenance contract for the government-owned, multimillion-dollar nationwide optic fibre network. Since we had all these elaborate discussions recently in the context of the new tariff regulations regarding competition and level playing field, I wonder how this helps to create a level playing field? I haven't read much from GoK/CCK/Min of Information on this so far, so first of all, I'd be curious to know how much of the East African coverage is accurate, and if not, what the facts are - if the PS Information is reading along? And then I'd be interested to hear opinions on how this will affect the competitive landscape. Anyone thoughts? Have a good day and keep warm :) Andrea
Andrea, Reading this from Dar where I am struggling to get TTCL to give us a connection to their fibre network so that we can have a 'fibre all through' solution to our office. Been here for the implementation since Friday but still no hope of a breakthrough mainly due to TTCL's bureaucracy and attitude. Clearly competition would help here! I would definitely be concerned if 'France Telecom to be granted an exclusive operational and maintenance contract for the government-owned, multimillion-dollar nationwide optic fibre network.' Having an operational and maintenance contract for NOFB is a good thing but would hope it would be done through competitive bidding... Victor ________________________________ From: kictanet-bounces+v-gathara=dfid.gov.uk@lists.kictanet.or.ke [mailto:kictanet-bounces+v-gathara=dfid.gov.uk@lists.kictanet.or.ke] On Behalf Of Andrea Bohnstedt Sent: 22 June 2010 10:21 To: Victor Gathara Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions Subject: [kictanet] GoK-Telkom-France Telecom agreement Dear all, I have been quite intrigued by the negotiations between GoK and France Telecom over their Telkom acquisition that were covered nicely consistently by the East African in recent weeks. The latest instalment here: http://www.theeastafrican.co.ke/news/How%20the%20French%20got%20their%20 way%20in%20battle%20for%20Telkom%20Kenya/-/2558/942312/-/gktealz/-/index .html The article states that GoK and France Telecom have come to an agreements under which * GoK will pay the USD10m fee for the 3G license for Telkom - in that context, I'd be curious to know if CCk will refund USD15m to Safaricom as, from what I understand, they had initially promised to do if the license fee will be lowered from its initial USD25m? * GoK will clear overdue bills to Telkom, contributions to the pension fund, overdue payment to KBC: no issue with these since it appears fair enough that GoK clears liabilities that precede the privatisation (never mind the question why GoK/parastatals have been let to accumulate such obligations in the first place). * Telkom to manage and control GoK's 20% stake in TEAMS. * France Telecom to be granted an exclusive operational and maintenance contract for the government-owned, multimillion-dollar nationwide optic fibre network. Since we had all these elaborate discussions recently in the context of the new tariff regulations regarding competition and level playing field, I wonder how this helps to create a level playing field? I haven't read much from GoK/CCK/Min of Information on this so far, so first of all, I'd be curious to know how much of the East African coverage is accurate, and if not, what the facts are - if the PS Information is reading along? And then I'd be interested to hear opinions on how this will affect the competitive landscape. Anyone thoughts? Have a good day and keep warm :) Andrea ________________________________________________________________________ This e-mail has been scanned for all viruses by Star. The service is powered by MessageLabs. For more information on a proactive anti-virus service working around the clock, around the globe, visit: http://www.star.net.uk ________________________________________________________________________ DFID, the Department for International Development: leading the UK Government's fight against world poverty. Find out more at http://www.dfid.gov.uk.
Andrea Bohnstedt, The National Optic Fibre Broadband Infrastructure (NOFBI) is an open access platform. It is like any other highway in Kenya where you can drive through with equal rights as other users. It cannot and will never be owned by any single operator. That will negate the principal of open access. NOFBI was built leveraging on Telkom Kenya facilities countrywide. It therefore made sense to give them the Management and Maitenance contract. This is like giving your property to a real estate company to manage within your terms. The Government Capacity in Teams is mainly used within government and for restoration purposes. This excess capacity can be utilized by interested parties and need to be managed without necessarily ceeding ownership. The Government will not create another competing entity in the telcoms sector but must prudently utilize public resources. Any business entity requires to always injection of capital equivalent to their share participation. Orange has been injecting working capital to TKL without corresponding response from GOK. The cost for 3G is an equivalent capital injection from GoK. Above all GoK owns part of TKL and like any other business will be required from time to time to pay up or receive what is due to it. On past bills, it seems you may not be aware where we have come from. On the decision to lower 3G licence, either way we were to face criticism. Regards Ndemo
Dear all,
I have been quite intrigued by the negotiations between GoK and France Telecom over their Telkom acquisition that were covered nicely consistently by the East African in recent weeks.
The latest instalment here: http://www.theeastafrican.co.ke/news/How%20the%20French%20got%20their%20way%...
The article states that GoK and France Telecom have come to an agreements under which
- GoK will pay the USD10m fee for the 3G license for Telkom - in that context, I'd be curious to know if CCk will refund USD15m to Safaricom as, from what I understand, they had initially promised to do if the license fee will be lowered from its initial USD25m? - GoK will clear overdue bills to Telkom, contributions to the pension fund, overdue payment to KBC: no issue with these since it appears fair enough that GoK clears liabilities that precede the privatisation (never mind the question why GoK/parastatals have been let to accumulate such obligations in the first place). - Telkom to manage and control GoK's 20% stake in TEAMS.
- France Telecom to be granted an exclusive operational and maintenance contract for the government-owned, multimillion-dollar nationwide optic fibre network. Since we had all these elaborate discussions recently in the context of the new tariff regulations regarding competition and level playing field, I wonder how this helps to create a level playing field?
I haven't read much from GoK/CCK/Min of Information on this so far, so first of all, I'd be curious to know how much of the East African coverage is accurate, and if not, what the facts are - if the PS Information is reading along?
And then I'd be interested to hear opinions on how this will affect the competitive landscape. Anyone thoughts?
Have a good day and keep warm :)
Andrea
---------------------------------------------- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by Jambo MailScanner, and is believed to be clean. --------------------------------------------- "easy access to the world"
_______________________________________________ kictanet mailing list kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke http://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/listinfo/kictanet
This message was sent to: bitange@jambo.co.ke Unsubscribe or change your options at http://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/options/kictanet/bitange%40jambo.co.ke
---------------------------------------------- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by Jambo MailScanner, and is believed to be clean. --------------------------------------------- "easy access to the world"
Dr. Ndemo, While your explanations below is good, it would be helpful to make public the exact details of the agreement so that we can make imput not based on the media publications as stipulated below, otherwise it does not help the process when the facts are not exactly clear, except you concede that the news publications are correct? Eric here On 22 Jun 2010, at 12:34, bitange@jambo.co.ke wrote:
Andrea Bohnstedt, The National Optic Fibre Broadband Infrastructure (NOFBI) is an open access platform. It is like any other highway in Kenya where you can drive through with equal rights as other users. It cannot and will never be owned by any single operator. That will negate the principal of open access. NOFBI was built leveraging on Telkom Kenya facilities countrywide. It therefore made sense to give them the Management and Maitenance contract. This is like giving your property to a real estate company to manage within your terms.
The Government Capacity in Teams is mainly used within government and for restoration purposes. This excess capacity can be utilized by interested parties and need to be managed without necessarily ceeding ownership. The Government will not create another competing entity in the telcoms sector but must prudently utilize public resources.
Any business entity requires to always injection of capital equivalent to their share participation. Orange has been injecting working capital to TKL without corresponding response from GOK. The cost for 3G is an equivalent capital injection from GoK. Above all GoK owns part of TKL and like any other business will be required from time to time to pay up or receive what is due to it.
On past bills, it seems you may not be aware where we have come from.
On the decision to lower 3G licence, either way we were to face criticism.
Regards
Ndemo
Dear all,
I have been quite intrigued by the negotiations between GoK and France Telecom over their Telkom acquisition that were covered nicely consistently by the East African in recent weeks.
The latest instalment here: http://www.theeastafrican.co.ke/news/How%20the%20French%20got%20their%20way%...
The article states that GoK and France Telecom have come to an agreements under which
- GoK will pay the USD10m fee for the 3G license for Telkom - in that context, I'd be curious to know if CCk will refund USD15m to Safaricom as, from what I understand, they had initially promised to do if the license fee will be lowered from its initial USD25m? - GoK will clear overdue bills to Telkom, contributions to the pension fund, overdue payment to KBC: no issue with these since it appears fair enough that GoK clears liabilities that precede the privatisation (never mind the question why GoK/parastatals have been let to accumulate such obligations in the first place). - Telkom to manage and control GoK's 20% stake in TEAMS.
- France Telecom to be granted an exclusive operational and maintenance contract for the government-owned, multimillion-dollar nationwide optic fibre network. Since we had all these elaborate discussions recently in the context of the new tariff regulations regarding competition and level playing field, I wonder how this helps to create a level playing field?
I haven't read much from GoK/CCK/Min of Information on this so far, so first of all, I'd be curious to know how much of the East African coverage is accurate, and if not, what the facts are - if the PS Information is reading along?
And then I'd be interested to hear opinions on how this will affect the competitive landscape. Anyone thoughts?
Have a good day and keep warm :)
Andrea
---------------------------------------------- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by Jambo MailScanner, and is believed to be clean. --------------------------------------------- "easy access to the world"
_______________________________________________ kictanet mailing list kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke http://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/listinfo/kictanet
This message was sent to: bitange@jambo.co.ke Unsubscribe or change your options at http://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/options/kictanet/bitange%40jambo.co.ke
---------------------------------------------- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by Jambo MailScanner, and is believed to be clean. --------------------------------------------- "easy access to the world"
_______________________________________________ kictanet mailing list kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke http://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/listinfo/kictanet
This message was sent to: emko@internetresearch.com.gh Unsubscribe or change your options at http://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/options/kictanet/emko%40internetresearch...
Eric M.K Osiakwan Director Internet Research www.internetresearch.com.gh emko@internetresearch.com.gh 42 Ring Road Central, Accra-North Tel: +233.21.258800 ext 7031 Fax: +233.21.258811 Cell: +233.24.4386792
Dr. Ndemo, Hope your morning is well. I would take it that the media report is subtantive in which case, what we have is not different from what happened in Ghana re: the Vodafone transaction in which the Ghana government threw in the national fiber backbone (under NCBC - an independent national backbone provider) to sweeten the deal except in this case, it is after the facts. That decision soo compromised the idea of an open access national fiber backbone that MTN, tiGO and now Glo are building their own competiting national fiber backbones. While this means that there is competition in that layer of the network, it begs the question of market uptake against multiple investments of the same dollar which is transfered to the enduser as high cost? Giving the management and maintenance contract to an active competitor in the market just gives room for abuse of incumbency and compromises the ability of the regulator to be active in a market as ours, even in more matured markets Rory Macmillan in the attached piece underlines the multiple challenges the regulator faces so am afraid to conclude that in your bid to salvage the Telkom Kenya deal, you have skewed the market in their direction which raises the question of the real intent at play. I hope you forgive my blantness..... Good day. Eric here On 22 Jun 2010, at 13:26, Eric M.K Osiakwan wrote:
Dr. Ndemo,
While your explanations below is good, it would be helpful to make public the exact details of the agreement so that we can make imput not based on the media publications as stipulated below, otherwise it does not help the process when the facts are not exactly clear, except you concede that the news publications are correct?
Eric here
On 22 Jun 2010, at 12:34, bitange@jambo.co.ke wrote:
Andrea Bohnstedt, The National Optic Fibre Broadband Infrastructure (NOFBI) is an open access platform. It is like any other highway in Kenya where you can drive through with equal rights as other users. It cannot and will never be owned by any single operator. That will negate the principal of open access. NOFBI was built leveraging on Telkom Kenya facilities countrywide. It therefore made sense to give them the Management and Maitenance contract. This is like giving your property to a real estate company to manage within your terms.
The Government Capacity in Teams is mainly used within government and for restoration purposes. This excess capacity can be utilized by interested parties and need to be managed without necessarily ceeding ownership. The Government will not create another competing entity in the telcoms sector but must prudently utilize public resources.
Any business entity requires to always injection of capital equivalent to their share participation. Orange has been injecting working capital to TKL without corresponding response from GOK. The cost for 3G is an equivalent capital injection from GoK. Above all GoK owns part of TKL and like any other business will be required from time to time to pay up or receive what is due to it.
On past bills, it seems you may not be aware where we have come from.
On the decision to lower 3G licence, either way we were to face criticism.
Regards
Ndemo
Dear all,
I have been quite intrigued by the negotiations between GoK and France Telecom over their Telkom acquisition that were covered nicely consistently by the East African in recent weeks.
The latest instalment here: http://www.theeastafrican.co.ke/news/How%20the%20French%20got%20their%20way%...
The article states that GoK and France Telecom have come to an agreements under which
- GoK will pay the USD10m fee for the 3G license for Telkom - in that context, I'd be curious to know if CCk will refund USD15m to Safaricom as, from what I understand, they had initially promised to do if the license fee will be lowered from its initial USD25m? - GoK will clear overdue bills to Telkom, contributions to the pension fund, overdue payment to KBC: no issue with these since it appears fair enough that GoK clears liabilities that precede the privatisation (never mind the question why GoK/parastatals have been let to accumulate such obligations in the first place). - Telkom to manage and control GoK's 20% stake in TEAMS.
- France Telecom to be granted an exclusive operational and maintenance contract for the government-owned, multimillion-dollar nationwide optic fibre network. Since we had all these elaborate discussions recently in the context of the new tariff regulations regarding competition and level playing field, I wonder how this helps to create a level playing field?
I haven't read much from GoK/CCK/Min of Information on this so far, so first of all, I'd be curious to know how much of the East African coverage is accurate, and if not, what the facts are - if the PS Information is reading along?
And then I'd be interested to hear opinions on how this will affect the competitive landscape. Anyone thoughts?
Have a good day and keep warm :)
Andrea
---------------------------------------------- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by Jambo MailScanner, and is believed to be clean. --------------------------------------------- "easy access to the world"
_______________________________________________ kictanet mailing list kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke http://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/listinfo/kictanet
This message was sent to: bitange@jambo.co.ke Unsubscribe or change your options at http://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/options/kictanet/bitange%40jambo.co.ke
---------------------------------------------- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by Jambo MailScanner, and is believed to be clean. --------------------------------------------- "easy access to the world"
_______________________________________________ kictanet mailing list kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke http://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/listinfo/kictanet
This message was sent to: emko@internetresearch.com.gh Unsubscribe or change your options at http://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/options/kictanet/emko%40internetresearch...
Eric M.K Osiakwan Director Internet Research www.internetresearch.com.gh emko@internetresearch.com.gh 42 Ring Road Central, Accra-North Tel: +233.21.258800 ext 7031 Fax: +233.21.258811 Cell: +233.24.4386792
_______________________________________________ kictanet mailing list kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke http://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/listinfo/kictanet
This message was sent to: emko@internetresearch.com.gh Unsubscribe or change your options at http://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/options/kictanet/emko%40internetresearch...
Eric M.K Osiakwan Director Internet Research www.internetresearch.com.gh emko@internetresearch.com.gh 42 Ring Road Central, Accra-North Tel: +233.21.258800 ext 7031 Fax: +233.21.258811 Cell: +233.24.4386792
PS The rest of the email made good sense however on the issue below I think though right it could have been done better for transparency and accounting procedures especially in an environment where we have private sector investing alongside government.
Any business entity requires to always injection of capital equivalent to their share participation. Orange has been injecting working capital to TKL without corresponding response from GOK. The cost for 3G is an equivalent capital injection from GoK. Above all GoK owns part of TKL and like any other business will be required from time to time to pay up or receive what is due to it.
[] So orange should have made the payment and then GOK would just turn that around and pay it back to Orange as their capital input as shareholders. End result is the same however Creates a transparent transaction and negates any misunderstanding by stakeholders. [] Regards Badru
Dear all,
I have been quite intrigued by the negotiations between GoK and France Telecom over their Telkom acquisition that were covered nicely consistently by the East African in recent weeks.
The latest instalment here:
http://www.theeastafrican.co.ke/news/How%20the%20French%20got%20their%2 0way%20in%20battle%20for%20Telkom%20Kenya/-/2558/942312/-/gktealz/- /index.html
The article states that GoK and France Telecom have come to an
under which
- GoK will pay the USD10m fee for the 3G license for Telkom - in
context, I'd be curious to know if CCk will refund USD15m to Safaricom as, from what I understand, they had initially promised to do if the license fee will be lowered from its initial USD25m? - GoK will clear overdue bills to Telkom, contributions to the
fund, overdue payment to KBC: no issue with these since it appears fair enough that GoK clears liabilities that precede the privatisation (never mind the question why GoK/parastatals have been let to accumulate such obligations in the first place). - Telkom to manage and control GoK's 20% stake in TEAMS.
- France Telecom to be granted an exclusive operational and
contract for the government-owned, multimillion-dollar nationwide optic fibre network. Since we had all these elaborate discussions recently in the context of the new tariff regulations regarding competition and level playing field, I wonder how this helps to create a level playing field?
I haven't read much from GoK/CCK/Min of Information on this so far, so first of all, I'd be curious to know how much of the East African coverage is accurate, and if not, what the facts are - if the PS Information is reading along?
And then I'd be interested to hear opinions on how this will affect
agreements that pension maintenance the
competitive landscape. Anyone thoughts?
Have a good day and keep warm :)
Andrea
---------------------------------------------- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by Jambo MailScanner, and is believed to be clean. --------------------------------------------- "easy access to the world"
_______________________________________________ kictanet mailing list kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke http://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/listinfo/kictanet
This message was sent to: bitange@jambo.co.ke Unsubscribe or change your options at
http://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/options/kictanet/bitange%40jambo.co .ke
---------------------------------------------- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by Jambo MailScanner, and is believed to be clean. --------------------------------------------- "easy access to the world"
_______________________________________________ kictanet mailing list kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke http://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/listinfo/kictanet
This message was sent to: ntegeb@one2net.co.ug Unsubscribe or change your options at http://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/options/kictanet/ntegeb%40one2net.c o.ug
Firstly, I am impressed the media is at last taking this matter up. In the past any queries on the sale of Telkom Kenya (TKL) to France Telecom was a 'no touch'. At a separate level this is an issue those who would like to see 'objective and independent' media need to interrogate: how do you deal with media ‘loyalty’ to the ‘big boys’ who pay for ads like Orange, Safaricom, Zain, etc? Back to TKL sale: on this and other online spaces, I have raised concerns and reservations about this transaction. It is indeed very surprising that even after purchasing TKL for a song, Kenyan Tax Payers/GoK are/is now being asked to pay Orange a further US$300m+! The jewel that TKL should have been will have been sold for FREE, yes, literally FREE! Even a cursory look should convince anyone TKL was under-sold: at the same period, 70% of GhanaTel was sold to Vodacom for US$900 (a figure the then opposition – now Govt in Ghana – still contested)! On a simple pro-rata basis, one would have thought TKL would have fetched higher. As Victor raises elsewhere, even the operation and maintenance of NOFBI should have been competitively out-sourced. Actually, I thought a while back I saw an advert re O&M Contract for NOFBI! Several contributors have raised the issue of ‘transparency and accountability’; lack of the same bedeviled even the earlier sale of TKL. Many Kenyans just woke up one day in the run-up to the 2007 elections to realize the ‘jewel’ was gone, for a song! With over 18,000 workers (including skilled) on the streets without a proper retrenchment plan! I guess hardly 3,000 remained at the new TKL! And Kenyans are being asked now to pump in more into this transaction: was it worthwhile in the first place? Were we fair to bidders who lost with the terms now being varied ‘after sale’? More questions than answers! Perhaps Hon (Eng) Rege who Chairs what used to be Energy, Communications & Public Works (ECPW) Committee of Parliament and is on this space should get his committee to seek for the public more answers. Rgrds, Shem --- On Tue, 22/6/10, Badru Ntege <ntegeb@one2net.co.ug> wrote: From: Badru Ntege <ntegeb@one2net.co.ug> Subject: Re: GoK-Telkom-France Telecom agreement To: shemochuodho@yahoo.com Cc: "'KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions'" <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> Date: Tuesday, 22 June, 2010, 17:43 PS The rest of the email made good sense however on the issue below I think though right it could have been done better for transparency and accounting procedures especially in an environment where we have private sector investing alongside government.
Any business entity requires to always injection of capital equivalent to their share participation. Orange has been injecting working capital to TKL without corresponding response from GOK. The cost for 3G is an equivalent capital injection from GoK. Above all GoK owns part of TKL and like any other business will be required from time to time to pay up or receive what is due to it.
[] So orange should have made the payment and then GOK would just turn that around and pay it back to Orange as their capital input as shareholders. End result is the same however Creates a transparent transaction and negates any misunderstanding by stakeholders. [] Regards Badru
Re: GoK-Telkom-France Telecom agreement Tuesday, 22 June, 2010 17:26 From: "Eric M.K Osiakwan" <emko@internetresearch.com.gh> Add sender to Contacts To: shemochuodho@yahoo.com Cc: "KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions" <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> Dr. Ndemo, While your explanations below is good, it would be helpful to make public the exact details of the agreement so that we can make imput not based on the media publications as stipulated below, otherwise it does not help the process when the facts are not exactly clear, except you concede that the news publications are correct? Eric here On 22 Jun 2010, at 12:34, bitange@jambo.co.ke wrote:
Andrea Bohnstedt, The National Optic Fibre Broadband Infrastructure (NOFBI) is an open access platform. It is like any other highway in Kenya where you can drive through with equal rights as other users. It cannot and will never be owned by any single operator. That will negate the principal of open access. NOFBI was built leveraging on Telkom Kenya facilities countrywide. It therefore made sense to give them the Management and Maitenance contract. This is like giving your property to a real estate company to manage within your terms.
The Government Capacity in Teams is mainly used within government and for restoration purposes. This excess capacity can be utilized by interested parties and need to be managed without necessarily ceeding ownership. The Government will not create another competing entity in the telcoms sector but must prudently utilize public resources.
Any business entity requires to always injection of capital equivalent to their share participation. Orange has been injecting working capital to TKL without corresponding response from GOK. The cost for 3G is an equivalent capital injection from GoK. Above all GoK owns part of TKL and like any other business will be required from time to time to pay up or receive what is due to it.
On past bills, it seems you may not be aware where we have come from.
On the decision to lower 3G licence, either way we were to face criticism.
Regards
Ndemo
Victor Gathara" <v-gathara@dfid.gov.uk> Add sender to Contacts To: shemochuodho@yahoo.com Cc: "KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions" <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> Andrea, Reading this from Dar where I am struggling to get TTCL to give us a connection to their fibre network so that we can have a 'fibre all through' solution to our office. Been here for the implementation since Friday but still no hope of a breakthrough mainly due to TTCL's bureaucracy and attitude. Clearly competition would help here! I would definitely be concerned if 'France Telecom to be granted an exclusive operational and maintenance contract for the government-owned, multimillion-dollar nationwide optic fibre network.' Having an operational and maintenance contract for NOFB is a good thing but would hope it would be done through competitive bidding... Victor
Dear all,
I have been quite intrigued by the negotiations between GoK and France Telecom over their Telkom acquisition that were covered nicely consistently by the East African in recent weeks.
The latest instalment here:
http://www.theeastafrican.co.ke/news/How%20the%20French%20got%20their%2 0way%20in%20battle%20for%20Telkom%20Kenya/-/2558/942312/-/gktealz/- /index.html
The article states that GoK and France Telecom have come to an
under which
- GoK will pay the USD10m fee for the 3G license for Telkom - in
context, I'd be curious to know if CCk will refund USD15m to Safaricom as, from what I understand, they had initially promised to do if the license fee will be lowered from its initial USD25m? - GoK will clear overdue bills to Telkom, contributions to the
fund, overdue payment to KBC: no issue with these since it appears fair enough that GoK clears liabilities that precede the privatisation (never mind the question why GoK/parastatals have been let to accumulate such obligations in the first place). - Telkom to manage and control GoK's 20% stake in TEAMS.
- France Telecom to be granted an exclusive operational and
contract for the government-owned, multimillion-dollar nationwide optic fibre network. Since we had all these elaborate discussions recently in the context of the new tariff regulations regarding competition and level playing field, I wonder how this helps to create a level playing field?
I haven't read much from GoK/CCK/Min of Information on this so far, so first of all, I'd be curious to know how much of the East African coverage is accurate, and if not, what the facts are - if the PS Information is reading along?
And then I'd be interested to hear opinions on how this will affect
agreements that pension maintenance the
competitive landscape. Anyone thoughts?
Have a good day and keep warm :)
Andrea
----------------------------------------------
participants (6)
-
Andrea Bohnstedt
-
Badru Ntege
-
bitange@jambo.co.ke
-
Eric M.K Osiakwan
-
Shem Ochuodho
-
Victor Gathara