Bharti, Reliance Infocomm and Tata-owned VSNL today jointly said there was no cartelisation in the national and international long-distance telephony as they employed different pricing models and offered customers the freedom of choice. |
On Wednesday, Communication and IT Minister Dayanidhi Maran had accused the three private national long-distance operators of forming a cartel. |
He also ruled out giving any compensation to them in the wake of the government's decision to usher in a new regime for national and international long-distance licences. |
In a joint letter to Maran, Bharti, Reliance and VSNL said their representations were "restricted to the premise of level-playing field and no "worse off" for the existing operators, the principle recognised and supported by the government in the past." |
"We, in fact, compete among ourselves in the market. We are deeply concerned by the media reports and would like to clarify that there is no cartelisation," the letter said. |
"We, the long distance operators, have a long-term commitment and have made huge investments as per the licence conditions," they added. |
They said they had made a joint representation "due to the absence of any association for long-distance operators and also because the issues were common". |