Major providers of mobile telephony in the country have threatened to withdraw their services from the North.
They hinged their threat on the spate of attacks on base stations which has made them to lose a whopping N1.03bn.
The
umbrella body of the telecoms operators, the Association of Licensed
Telecommunications Operators of Nigeria, on Thursday said its members
were losing too much to the development and may close shop if it became
too dangerous to operate in the region.
The major GSM providers – MTN, Glo, Airtel and Etisalat – are all members of ALTON.
Gunmen,
also on Thursday reportedly bombed a base station belonging to an
indigenous telecoms infrastructure company, IHS Nigeria, in Kano, barely
24 hours after the attack on several base stations in Borno, Yobe,
Bauchi and Gombe states.
The Executive Director, Commercial and
Business Development, IHS, Mr. Gbenga Onakomaiya, who confirmed the
development to our correspondent on Thursday, said one of the company’s
base stations was bombed in Borno on Wednesday while another one was
bombed in Kano on Thursday morning.
Officials of ALTON put the number of base stations that had been attacked in the north at 26.
President
of ALTON, Mr. Gbenga Adebayo, who decried the situation, said “If it
becomes impossible to continue to do business in the face of rising
attacks on telecoms sites, operators will naturally suspend operations
in the area.
“This is because beyond base stations, these
elements may begin to target telecoms operators‘ offices and data
centres among other key infrastructure. That is why it is important that
the situation is curtailed before it gets to that point.
“During
military coups, dissidents attack newspaper and television houses as
well as telecommunications centres and infrastructure to destabilise the
government. This is not different from what we are experiencing now as
people’s phones can’t be reached in the affected areas.”
The
ALTON president said an emergency meeting of the association’s
executives had been called for today (Friday) to decide on what next to
do.
A Chief Executive Officer of one of the GSM companies, who
asked not to be named, said though the company was not contemplating
suspending its operations as of now, it could be forced to do so if the
situation persisted.
“We are not contemplating the withdrawal of
services as of today but if the situation continues like this in the
next four to five days, we may have to withdraw service. But we are not
contemplating that now,” he said.
Telecoms infrastructure
analysts in the country have put the average cost of a base station at
$250,000, which amounts to N39.47m at an exchange rate of N157.91 to a
dollar as at Thursday.
With 26 base stations already destroyed, an investment of N1.03bn might have gone down the drain.
Contrary
to the belief that only MTN, Airtel and Glo were affected, the
Executive Secretary, ALTON, Mr. Gbolahan Awonuga, said the attack
affected all telecoms operators, including Multilinks and Helios Tower.
When contacted, an official of Helios Tower, said that about three of the company’s base stations were also affected.
He
confirmed the report that services had been disrupted in the affected
areas as engineers had been finding it difficult to give adequate
reports of the situation because they couldn’t be reached.
Onokomaiya,
who attested to the seriousness of the situation, said, “One of our
base stations was bombed in Borno on Wednesday and another was bombed in
Kano this morning (Thursday). The base station was completely burnt
out. The generators, shelter and equipment are gone. The only things
remaining now are the towers and we have to assess them to ascertain
their integrity.”
A formal report sent by Multilinks to ALTON,
which was made available to our correspondent, confimed that Multilinks
base stations located at Mainok Village, Borno and another one at Abari
Village in Damaturu, were damaged.
The report said, “Reports
obtained from our personnel indicate that extremists numbering about 40
stormed the area at about 22:20 Hrs on 05/09/2012 and immediately
launched an attack on the MTN cell site. After the attack on MTN cell
site, the extremists proceeded to our site which is close to the MTN
site to launch a similar attack.
“As at this (Thursday) morning,
the extent of damage done to the site is yet to be ascertained as
contact with the security men is yet to be established after the attack.
“
Also our Abari site in Damaturu which is not on air was reportedly
attacked also. Details remain sketchy as those resident in the area
were all indoors.”
Stakeholders urged the Federal Government to
wade into the issue to ensure that the safety of lives of operators’
personnel and agents was assured.
Key stakeholders had called on
the Federal Government to bestow on ICT infrastructure a Critical
National Security Infrastructure pending the time appropriate laws would
be enacted to strengthen it.
“The time has come for the passing
into law of the National Security Bill pending in the National Assembly
which must be made all-embracing by giving telecoms industry a critical
mention in the bill,” a former Executive Vice- Chairman, Nigerian
Communications Commission, Mr. Ernest Ndukwe, said.
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