She talked about ongoing discussions with these operators to discover help measures to make sure their viability.
The minister highlighted that the preliminary promise of exclusivity to broadband suppliers was compromised by the following public sale.
“It is as if we gave with one hand and took with the other. I have had extensive conversations with them to see how we can support them and it is not just Surfline which exited the market but Blue Broadband was also in there.”
She advised Bernard Avle that placing up the 4G spectrum for public sale started weakening the broadband suppliers.
“Government offered spectrum to native operators to do broadband on the understanding that they’d be given exclusivity in that house, whereas cellular community operators did voice and procured information companies from them [broadband operators] in the event that they wished to present these information companies to their subscribers.
“After promising them exclusivity, we went forward and auctioned the 4G to those similar large gamers, who MTN then acquired the spectrum as a result of it has a lot extra monetary muscle than these native entities and so MTN cornered the market.”
The Minister has additionally clarified that MTN, one among Ghana’s main telecommunications corporations, has not been excluded from the 5G rollout plans.
On May 30, when the federal government introduced its plans to introduce 5G throughout the subsequent six months, trade specialists expressed considerations about why MTN was not a part of the consortium – Next-Gen InfraCo (NGIC) – tasked with implementing the 5G community.
She refuted the claims that MTN was intentionally excluded, calling them a false alarm and much from the reality.