Selangor Journal
An advertisement for the 5G network by U Mobile is displayed in Kuala Lumpur, on September 26, 2022. — Picture by REUTERS

Five telcos agree to use 5G network

KUALA LUMPUR, Nov 1 — Five Malaysian mobile operators have agreed to use the Federal government’s state-owned 5G network, paving the way for 5G services to be rolled out to customers after months of delayed talks.

Malaysia’s 5G plans had been repeatedly set back since last year amid an impasse between the government and major carriers over pricing and transparency, including concern that a sole state-run network would result in a nationalised monopoly.

The government has said a single shared network would reduce costs, improve efficiency and speed up infrastructure works.

Celcom Axiata, DiGi Telecommunications, Telekom Malaysia and U Mobile said on Monday they had signed agreements to access the 5G network run by state agency Digital Nasional Berhad (DNB) for 10 years.

A fifth operator, YTL Communications, also signed the deal, Communications Minister Tan Sri Annuar Musa told reporters on Tuesday.

In its statement, U Mobile said it would begin making 5G services commercially available to its customers from Thursday.

DiGi said the access agreement incorporated ‘improvements to a few key terms’ in the government’s ‘reference access offer’ (RAO) — a document published earlier this year setting out pricing, service commitments, and other details of DNB’s wholesale 5G model.

The updated RAO was expected to be published upon approval by Malaysia’s communications regulator, DiGi said.

Another operator, Maxis Bhd, said it was still assessing the governance requirements for the access agreement.

Maxis, Celcom, DiGi and U Mobile — the country’s four major telco firms — had earlier requested the government review the RAO, describing its pricing model as ‘not commercially viable’, Reuters reported in May.

The signing of the access agreements comes after Celcom, DiGi, Telekom and YTL agreed to take up a collective 65 per cent stake in DNB this month.

U Mobile and Maxis declined to take up equity after the government declined their proposal for a majority stake.

— Reuters

 

Top Picks

Don’t follow Fed, focus on domestic inflation, IMF tells Asian central banks

Dubai airport to resume full operations within 24 hours

No more English FA Cup replays beginning 2024-25 season