(Reuters) - Vietnam-based telecoms operator Viettel plans to invest $1
billion in a new third-generation (3G) mobile phone network in Tanzania, the
office of the east African country's president said on Tuesday.
The mobile telecoms sector in east Africa's
second-biggesteconomy has
grown rapidly over the past decade, driven by demand for 3G mobile services.
There are about 29 million mobile subscribers, representing market penetration
of 64 percent, according to the country's telecoms regulator.
"Viettel will invest $1 billion in telecoms and other
services in Tanzania, hence making Tanzania the second country after Peruto receive its state-of-the-art telecoms
technology," the Tanzanian President's office said in a statement.
State-owned Viettel, which is run by Vietnam's Ministry of
Defence, won its Peruvian mobile license in 2012.
Viettel chairman Manh Nguyen Hung made the investment pledge when
Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete visited the company's headquarters in
Vietnam on Monday, the president's office said.
The company will offer low-cost smartphones and provide free
internet services to schools, hospitals and offices, the president's office
added.
Tanzania announced this month that it had granted a mobile phone
network to Viettel, which is expected to launch its mobile services next July.
Viettel will compete with the four other main operators: Bharti
Airtel, Etisalat-owned [ETELZS.UL] Zantel, Vodacom Tanzania, owned by South
Africa's Vodacom, and Tigo Tanzania, which is part of Sweden's Millicom.
Three other mobile operators - state-run TTCL, Benson and Smart -
have a tiny market share.
MANDATORY
LISTINGS
Tanzania
expects its mobile operators to list on its stock exchange next year under
rules aimed at enabling its citizens to take a stake in one of Africa's
fastest-growing industries.
Like other
African countries, mobile phone use has rocketed in Tanzania over the past
decade, with telecoms the fastest-expanding sector in the country.
Leading
telecoms companies operating in the country said they were in talks with the
government over the mandatory listing requirements, but most declined further
comment.
However,
Egypt-based TA Telecom's CEO Amr Shady said the rules are counter-productive to
sector growth.
"The
... law that states that new telecoms are required to list on the exchange is
extreme. In reality, offering incentives to list would be a much better
approach," Shady said in an emailed statement to Reuters.
"Companies
such as TA Telecom have experienced many challenges acquiring a license
to operate in the telecoms services space in Tanzania. Disincentives and
roadblocks for (foreign companies) to come to Tanzania can only hamper
Tanzania's long-term competitiveness.”
(Additional reporting Carolyn Cohn
in London; Editing by George Obulutsa and David Goodman)
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