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160
Vodafone Group Plc
Annual Report 2012
Turkey
Our MTRs are currently 0.0323 Lira per minute.
In July 2011 the government announced that rural villages with
populations of less than 500 which do not have GSM coverage will be
provided with mobile services funded by the universal service fund.
Following an agreement with the Ministry of Transport, Maritime Affairs
and Communications in January 2012, 687 such villages are to be
covered by Vodafone Turkey.
In August 2011 the national regulator indicated that rates for the
termination of calls originated from abroad will no longer be subject
toregulation.
In September 2011 the national regulator proposed enabling refarming
in the 900 MHz and 1800 MHz bands and assigning additional 900MHz
spectrum to Avea and 1800 MHz spectrum to Vodafone and Turkcell.
Further details are expected shortly.
In October 2011 the Council of Ministers increased the taxes on
handsets from 20% to 25%.
Africa, Middle East and Asia Pacic region
India
Litigation remains pending in the Telecommunications Dispute
Settlement Appellate Tribunal (‘TDSAT’) and Supreme Court in relation
to a number of signicant regulatory issues including MTRs, spectrum
usage charges, and 3G intra-circle roaming (‘ICR’).
In February 2012 the Union Minister of Communications and IT
announced some aspects of the spectrum management and licensing
framework, including a reduction of licence fees to a uniform fee of 8%,
but deferred other aspects including possible one-off fees for spectrum
above 6.2 MHz.
The Supreme Court of India issued a decision on 2 February 2012
cancelling the 122 new licences issued in 2008 with effect from June
2012 and directing the government to re-allocate the spectrum by
auction. None of Vodafones licences were affected by this decision and
Vodafone is in active dialogue with the government with a view to
acquiring additional spectrum through auction. The implications of
these developments will be considered alongside the issues announced
in February 2012 by the Union Minister of Communications and IT,
thenational regulator’s recommendations of May 2010 and April 2012,
and the Cabinet before a decision is taken.
New regulations came into force during the 2012 nancial year
inrelation to the activation of value added services, unsolicited
commercial communications, and distribution of prepaid vouchers,
requiring some changes to activation procedures, capping of high
volume SMS users and content of vouchers.
The current MTR is maintained at INR 0.2.
South Africa
The Ministry of Communications and the national regulator have
decided to postpone the process of licensing “high demand spectrum
(2.6 GHz and 800 MHz) while the Ministry reviews its long-term policy
approach to the information and communications technology (‘ICT’)
sector. The Minister initiated a policy review process in April 2012 at
theNational ICT Colloquium. This process is expected to be completed
in2014.
The National Consumer Commission (‘NCC’), the regulatory authority
tasked with enforcing the Consumer Protection Act (‘CPA), has instituted
investigations into the communications sector including consumer
complaints relating to quality of service, international roaming charges,
airtime and data carry-over rules, and contract terms and conditions.
The NCC issued a compliance notice against Vodacom in August 2011
in relation to xed-term consumer agreements which the NCC alleges
do not comply with the CPA. Vodacom is challenging the legal validity of
the compliance notice in South Africas National Consumer Tribunal.
MTRs are currently ZAR 0.56 per minute (peak) and ZAR 0.52 (off peak)
and, under a continuing glide path, are due to decrease to ZAR 0.40 (at
rate) in April 2013.
Other Africa, Middle East and Asia Pacic
Australia
Vodafone Hutchison Australia has agreed to renew its spectrum
licences in the 850 MHz and 1800 MHz bands, from their expiry in
2013,for an additional period of 15years for a fee of approximately
AUS$590million (£400 million). Thegovernment is now preparing to
auction 700 MHz and 2.6 GHz spectrum in late 2012 or early 2013.
The national regulator cut MTRs to AUS$0.06 (4.05 pence) on 1 January
2012. A glide path has been set with the MTR to fall to AUS$0.036
(2.43pence) by 1 January 2014.
Egypt
The national regulator set MTRs at 65% of each operator’s average
on-net retail revenue per minute in September 2008 and issued a
similar decree in 2010. Mobinil obtained interim relief against this
regulation and a nal order is awaited. Vodafone Egypt has led a similar
case in the Administrative Court challenging the regulator’s decisions
regarding the applicable MTRs as well as the calculation formula. In
December 2011 the Commisioner’s Committee of the Administrative
Court issued a non-binding opinion recommending the annulment
ofthe regulator’s decision. A nal decision has not yet been made.
Aseries of arbitrations concerning interconnection payments have been
launched by Mobinil and Telecom Egypt, leading to a claim by Telecom
Egypt against Vodafone Egypt relating to historic termination charges.
New Zealand
Vodafone and Telecom New Zealand have been selected to share a
NZ$285 million (£146 million) government grant to roll-out and operate
an open accessbre and wireless network in rural areas.
The national regulator has adopted a regulation which reduces MTRs
from around 18 cents to 7.5 cents in May 2011, with further reductions
to 4.0 cents from April 2012. SMS termination rates are regulated at
0.06cents per SMS.
The government is now preparing to auction 700 MHz spectrum in late
2012 or early 2013.
The governments of New Zealand and Australia have jointly appointed
consultants to investigate the costs of providing trans-tasman
international roaming services as part of an ongoing enquiry.
Regulation (continued)