[PHNOM PENH POST] 
The Cambodian government has approved the establishment of a regulatory 
body for telecommunications, a sector where lax or non-existent rules 
have led to frequency and pricing disputes, insiders said.
The Cambodia Telecom Regulator, which Prime Minister Hun Sen approved in
 a draft sub-decree on Friday, will aim to make rules clearer and more 
transparent, Minister of Posts and Telecommunication So Khun said.
“The
 establishment of CTR will improve the telecom sector’s present 
management system by separating the functional roles of the Ministry of 
Post and Telecom,” a press release from the ministry stated.
The 
regulator will become a public entity authorised by the government, with
 autonomy over technical and administrative controls, as well as 
establishment, operations, and usage of network and telecom services, 
the press release said.
Industry leaders said the regulator is a 
much-welcomed step for Cambodia’s telecommunications. “We have been 
waiting for this for a long time,” CEO of Mekong Net Sok Channda said.  
“Previously, it had been difficult to do business because we didn’t have
 an exact law.”
After Mekong Net bought a frequency license for 
WiMax services in 2005, the ministry continued to sell licenses for that
 frequency, Sok Channda said. The result was overlapping license claims 
from multiple ISP providers.
The lack of clear regulation has been a persistent problem in the sector. 
In
 January 2010, the ministry granted a frequency licence to Star Digital 
TV that overlapped with several other providers, the Post reported at 
the time. In the row, two companies’ licenses were revoked, reportedly 
without compensation.
Mekong Net has submitted claims to the ministry in the past, all of which have gone unanswered, Sok Channda said.
Kay Lot, the operations manager for Mobitel, said he supported the initiative to resolve pricing disputes in the sector.
“It
 is a positive development in the telecom sector to have established a 
transparent telecom law that finally makes clear distinctions between 
the ministry and regulators,” he said, adding that the new laws would 
encourage potential investors and increase confidence. Mobitel accused 
other mobile providers of price dumping in September 2009, the Post 
reported. Earlier that year, the United Nations Development Programme 
said Cambodia’s mobile market needed more regulation to prevent industry
 malpractice.
Government statistics showed 13 million people, 
representing 91 per cent of Cambodia’s total population, are subscribers
 to mobile-phone and fixed-phone services, with roughly 680,000 internet
 subscribers. 
Numbers obtained last month by the Post showed 
14.9 million mobile subscribers, or more than the total population of 
the country.
Service providers in Cambodia have long decried 
subscriber-counting practices and standards, saying that each company 
has a different standard for what constitutes an active user. 


 
 
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