Mobile phone Giants threaten to withdraw services from the North

Source: huhuonline.com

The umbrella body of telecommunication operators, the Association of Licensed Telecommunications Operators of Nigeria, ALTON, yesterday said its member - MTN, GLO, Airtel and Etisalat will cut off services from the North after terrorists   attacked

public buildings, telecommunications facilities and military structures in some northern states; attacks which have already cost them a whopping N1.03bn.

Gunmen, yesterday 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. Communications in the state with cell phones have been disrupted. ALTON officials put the number of base stations vandalized in the north at 26. 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.

'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, ALTON President Gbenga Adebayo said, adding; 'This is because beyond base stations, these elements may begin to target telecoms operators' offices and data centers among other key infrastructure. That is why it is important that the situation is curtailed before it gets to that point.'

Eye-witness accounts said one of the company's base stations was bombed in Borno on Wednesday while another one was bombed in Kano on Thursday morning. Just like they did in Borno State, the terrorists set ablaze the service-base masts of Airtel, Glo and Etisalat in Potiskum and Damaturu yesterday, allegedly killed 16 people, including the Yobe Government House Protocol Officer, Mallam Adamu, who was returning from work. An attendant in the morgue at the Sani Abacha Specialists Hospital, Damaturu told Huhuonline.com that men of the Joint Task Force, JTF and police brought in 16 bodies yesterday morning to the hospital.

The JTF in Borno State yesterday said terrorists' attacks on telecom masts were designed to 'disrupt' communication services and prevent residents from providing information on the activities of gunmen to the military and the police so that they can protect life and property. JTF spokesman Lt.-Col. Sagir Musa, in a press statement issued in Maiduguri, said that the terrorists had turned to the destruction of Global System of Mobile Communication (GSM) masts and other communication facilities in some areas of Maiduguri to frustrate residents from giving the military vital information.

'Members of public are therefore, reminded to continue give credible information to the JTF, the police and other security agencies to contain the ugly trend through the following telephone numbers - 08064174066, 08154429346, and 07065464012,' 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.

A formal report sent by Multilinks to ALTON, which was made available to Huhuonline.com, 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.

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.

Disturbed by the attacks, the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has called for quick passage of the Telecom Infrastructure Bill, which seeks to make telecommunication infrastructure a critical national infrastructure. Director, Public Affairs of the NCC, Mr. Tony Ojobor, who made the appeal yesterday in Abuja, said that the bill, if passed into law, would make it a criminal offence and economic sabotage for anyone to vandalise telecom infrastructure in the country.

He explained that the commission had not received formal report on the number of base stations affected in the attack and their locations, adding that as a regulator, the commission expects service providers to get in touch with the commission whenever there are issues affecting quality of service in the country