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COAI to approach states for opening retail recharge points to facilitate feature phone users

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Press Trust of India New Delhi
Last Updated : Apr 17 2020 | 3:10 PM IST

Industry body COAI on Friday said it will write to all states seeking to open retail recharge points in a staggered manner to help feature phone mobile users in recharging.

The association said it has already highlighted the need for opening up retail recharge points to the Karnataka government during a conference call on Friday.

COAI said it will be writing to all states now for permission to restart retail recharge points along with requisite passes for movement of people who will man these centres.

"We are requesting states to open retail recharging centres to help facilitate recharging by feature phone subscribers, as well as and passes for people who are involved in the retail recharge business," Cellular Operators' Association of India (COAI) Director General Rajan Mathews told PTI.

As it is, telecom is classified as essential services, he said, adding "so the only question is how do we move gradually state by state...so we are working with each of the states. We hope it will be consistent approach amongst states".

The association is also seeking permission for movement of people to handle any fibre cuts.

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"For retail recharge points we are suggesting a staggered approach as it would depend on severity (of coronavirus cases) in each state. So we are suggesting a staggered approach based on what each state sees as appropriate," Mathews said.

Meanwhile, telecom operators including Reliance Jio, Bharti Airtel and Vodafone Idea have approached sector regulator TRAI seeking time till April 20 to submit data on recharge pattern of prepaid users.

The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI), had earlier this week, asked operators to explain the pattern of mobile phone recharge by prepaid users during the lockdown period as it examined uninterrupted services.

According to sources privy to the development, telecom companies have asked TRAI for time till April 20 to provide the details.

The operators have said that assimilating information would require additional time given the ongoing lockdown, and that 24 hour turnaround would be difficult.

TRAI had given operators 24 hours to revert with data on recharge pattern during lockdown.

In similar letters sent to operators on April 14, TRAI had asked telcos for data on number of prepaid subscribers whose balance got exhausted and was not recharged on their own (between midnight of March 24 and midnight of April 13, 2020).

The regulator further asked for data on number of prepaid subscribers whose balance got exhausted but were provided top up of Rs 10 or more by the operators or credited additional minutes for voice calls during the period of lockdown.

The regulator also asked for number of prepaid subscribers whose prepaid balance got exhausted and were not recharged during February.

India, earlier this week, decided to extend lockdown restrictions till May 3 to contain the spread of the coronavirus pandemic in the country, which has so far claimed 437 lives and infected 13,387 people in the country.

During the first phase of the lockdown, telecom operators had announced benefits for low income prepaid users to help them tide over ongoing crisis.

Vodafone Idea had announced extension of validity on prepaid plans availed by low-income customers using feature phones till April 17, and Rs 10 talktime credit, while Bharti Airtel too had offered extension in the validity period of over 8 crore prepaid connections until April 17 as well as credited Rs 10 talk time in these accounts.

Reliance Jio had offered its JioPhone users 100 minutes of free talktime and 100 free SMS till April 17, and their incoming calls would continue even post validity of their prepaid vouchers.

The telecom industry has rejected TRAI's call for extending benefits of talktime credit and extended validity to all prepaid mobile phone user base.

COAI had previously argued that telecom firms had offered over Rs 600 crore of benefits to low-income users to stay connected during the nationwide lockdown, and extending it to all prepaid users was unjustified.

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First Published: Apr 17 2020 | 3:10 PM IST

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