The
Economist
A deal in 2010 between France
Telecom and Ethio Telecom was seen in some quarters as a step towards
privatisation and competition. It drove down calling costs but appears to have
faltered with the recent departure of Bruno Duthoit, the French chief
executive. Little further improvement is likely now, says Markos Lemma, a local
entrepreneur.
What the government wants from
China are cheap loans
and more control over its citizens. The new deal will provide soft loans to buy
a Chinese-built 4G broadband network for the capital, Addis Ababa , and an expanded
3G network for the rest of the country. A similar deal with the same companies
in 2007 expanded Ethiopia ’s mobile-phone
subscriber base but did little to shorten its digital lag.
Hopes that other companies
might get a look in were always optimistic. The Prime Minister, Hailemariam
Desalegn, has dubbed the telecoms industry a “cash cow” needed to pay for a
rail link to neighbouring Djibouti . Ethio Telecom
delivers more than $300m a year to the state coffers. Customers grumble that
its slogan should be “Disconnecting Ethiopia from the future”.
The country is one of the world’s last big untouched
telecoms markets. The government could earn as much as $3 billion from
auctioning licences. But the powerful security
services have routinely objected. The Committee to Protect Journalists,
a New York-based free-speech lobby, accuses the government of conducting a “systematic effort to control all forms of communications”
after it passed laws imposing prison sentences of up to 15 years on anyone
caught bypassing online censors. Yidnek Haile, a student in Addis Ababa, was
arrested two years ago for showing customers at an internet café how to make
online calls.
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