SIRIVISH TOOMGUM
THE NATION
BANGKOK: -- Foreign investors are concerned about the national broadcasting and telecom watchdog's regulations on preventing foreign dominance in the telecom industry.
Settapong Malisuwan, telecom committee chairman of the National Broadcasting and Telecommu-|nications Commission (NBTC), said that foreign investors and fund managers had recently inquired of him about the watchdog's progress in finalising the 2.1GHz spectrum-licensing plan. They have also expressed concern about NBTC's existing foreign dominance regulations.
The regulations define foreign dominance as direct and indirect control over a telecom company's policies and the appointment of directors and high-ranking management.
The watchdog has considering whether to revoke or revise the regulations. It will have to be finished by March, Settapong added.
NBTC commissioner Suthiphon Thaveechaiyagarn said the watchdog already has asked the legal |unit to examine if the regulations contradict the country's inter-national trade commitments.
Total Access Communication (DTAC), which has Norway's Telenor as strategic partner, filed a complaint with the Central Administrative Court last November, claiming foreign dominance regulations were illegal and unconstitutional.
The NBTC held the public hearing on the foreign dominance regulations last December to see if they need to be revised. The regulations, which were issued by the now-defunct National Telecommunications Commission (NTC), took effect last August.
The contentious issue of foreign ownership in the Thai telecom sector was once hotly debated in the NTC's public hearing on the 2.1GHz licence auction rules many years ago.
Many parties viewed that the spectrum, a precious national resource, should not fall into the hands of foreigners or their nominees, citing concerns for national security.
True Corp has supported the regulations as a necessary tool to prevent foreign entities competing against local telecom operators in bidding for key spectrum licences, citing national security. But some parties said the regulations should be revoked as they might contradict Thailand's commitments to global trade organisations.
True is the only telecom operator without foreign strategic partnership. Advanced Info Service has Singapore Telecom as its strategic partner.
The NBTC intends to auction the much-awaited 2.1GHz spectrum licence in the third quarter. Settapong added that the 2.1GHz spectrum management subcommittee would convene today to work out the licensing plan, which is expected to be finished by April.
Part of the plan development will be based on the 2.1GHz auction plan made by the NTC.
Settapong has mentioned many times that the suitable spectrum bandwidth for one operator to provide the 3G service is 15MHz.
After taking the office last October, the NBTC has prepared key elements for granting the long-awaited 3G licences.
Lately it drafted the regulations to govern the mobile-data service, offering to ensure data-service quality in the full 3G era. The draft was put for first public hearing last month.
The NBTC's telecom committee also plans to set the maximum tariff fee for the data services.

-- The Nation 2012-02-06













