Subscribe
About
  • Home
  • /
  • Telecoms
  • /
  • Wireless access body strongly opposed to Vodacom acquisition of Neotel

Wireless access body strongly opposed to Vodacom acquisition of Neotel

The Wireless Access Providers' Association (WAPA) today registered strong opposition to Vodacom's planned acquisition of Neotel and said it was watching developments carefully before formulating a formal response.

WAPA believes the acquisition would stifle competition, lead to job cuts, and do little to reduce the digital divide that it believes should be the country's top priority with regard to broadband.

WAPA is seeing an increase in membership exceeding 25% per year, as smaller operators seize the gap created in the broadband market, particularly with respect to last-mile access. This is in line with international trends, where considerably more data is now carried on so-called WiFi-based technologies than on 3G and LTE.

"The growth in smaller operators is good for the customer and good for the country," says Christopher Geerdts, Chairperson of WAPA. "It increases competition, creates jobs and drives rural broadband penetration. Larger operators tend to cut jobs and cherry-pick customers in the most lucrative suburbs and business parks."

WAPA believes South Africa needs to build up a complementary strategy where large and small players coexist and play to their strengths. In addition, operators with a national backbone need to provide truly neutral and open wholesale services so as to open the market to competition.

WAPA and many of its members enjoy an excellent relationship with Neotel, which has proven that strong, wholesale providers with a commitment to rural roll-out can complement smaller operators with existing presence and experience in those areas.

"WAPA's concern is that Vodacom's influence will dampen these gains achieved, severely limit open wholesale access, and set back rather than increase competition and consumer choice," concludes Geerdts.

Share

WAPA

The Wireless Access Providers' Association (WAPA), established in 2006, is a non-profit organisation acting as a collective voice for independent wireless operators in South Africa. WAPA's primary objective is to ensure the sustainability of the wireless access services market.

WAPA facilitates self-regulation of the outdoor fixed wireless and indoor nomadic wireless industries. WAPA is positioned to be an interface between the government regulator (ICASA), network operators, service providers and consumers.

WAPA's membership is differentiated from other wireless providers by their focus on using open standard wireless technologies (WiFi). WAPA offers its members regulatory advice, a code of conduct, an enforcement process, and a forum for sharing knowledge and resolving technical problems. WAPA also engages policymakers on behalf of its members, to improve the regulatory environment. For more information, go to: http://www.wapa.org.za.

Editorial contacts

Ingi Deutschlander
WAPA
(082) 458 1656
ingi@wapa.org.za