The Nigerian
Communications Commission (NCC) has sanctioned three out of the four major
network operators in the country – MTN Nigeria, Globacom and Airtel – the sum
of N647.5 million for breach of key performance indicators (KPIs) and poor
quality of service for the month of January 2014. It however gave Etisalat a
clean bill as it met all the set KPIs.
The telecoms
regulator, in letters dated February 19, 2014, addressed to each of the
affected companies, said after collating statistics from the network operating
centres of the operators in the month of January, discovered that the services
provided by MTN, Airtel and Globacom fell below the KPI published by it in
2013.
The letters,
which were obtained from a source in the Ministry of
Communications Technology, will be delivered to the three network operators
today.
A breakdown
of the sanctions indicate that Globacom was penalised, N277.5 million for three
breaches, while MTN and Airtel got sanctioned N185 million each for two
breaches.
According to the letters conveying the breaches and sanctions, the NCC set four critical KPIs – Call Setup Success Rate (CSSR), Drop Call Rate (DCR), Traffic Channel Congestion (TCHCONG) and Stand Alone Dedicated Control Channel Congestion (SDCONG).
According to the letters conveying the breaches and sanctions, the NCC set four critical KPIs – Call Setup Success Rate (CSSR), Drop Call Rate (DCR), Traffic Channel Congestion (TCHCONG) and Stand Alone Dedicated Control Channel Congestion (SDCONG).
With a
target of 98 per cent for CSSR, MTN, Airtel, and Globacom failed to meet the
target in January. They scored 96.85 per cent, 96.99 per cent and 96.89 per
cent respectively.
In the DCR
category, NCC set a target of 1 per cent. The audit report referred to by NCC
in its letter stated that for the month of January, MTN and Globacom failed to
meet the target, while Airtel exceeded the target with a score of 0.84 per
cent.
For the
SDCONG KPI, with a target of 0.20 per cent, Airtel and Globacom failed to meet
the target, scoring 0.40 per cent and 0.58 per cent respectively, while MTN
exceeded the target with a score of 0.17 per cent.
For the last
KPI, TCHCONG, with a target of 2 per cent, all the three networks exceeded the
target, as MTN scored 0.55 per cent; Globacom – 0.79 per cent; and Airtel –
0.79 per cent.
In summary, MTN failed to meet the targets set in the Quality of Service Regulations for the CSSR and DCR computations; Globacom failed to meet the targets set for CSSR, DCR and SDCONG computations; while Airtel failed to meet the targets for CSSR and SDCONG computations.
In summary, MTN failed to meet the targets set in the Quality of Service Regulations for the CSSR and DCR computations; Globacom failed to meet the targets set for CSSR, DCR and SDCONG computations; while Airtel failed to meet the targets for CSSR and SDCONG computations.
The
operators are expected to pay the sanctions on or before March 7, 2014.
Should they fail to pay the sanctions within the stipulated deadline, each of them will be liable to pay N2.5 million daily, as long as the contravention persists.
Should they fail to pay the sanctions within the stipulated deadline, each of them will be liable to pay N2.5 million daily, as long as the contravention persists.
Apart from
the monetary sanctions, all the three operators were barred by NCC from selling
new SIM cards throughout the month of March 2014, with effect from March 1 to
March 31; barred from churning or deleting from their networks inactive (or
non-revenue generating SIMs) during the period March 1 to March 31; barred from
supplying new SIM cards from their warehouses to dealers or third parties
during the same period; and stopped from all promotions until the identified
KPIs considered are positively addressed.
The letters
further stated: “NCC shall carry out an audit of MTN, Globacom and Airtel on
March 1 and also on March 31to ensure no sale of SIM cards or churning of
non-revenue generating SIMs occurred during the period, either using their
network provisioning systems or directly on the HLR.
“Any
deviation or alteration of patterns (in terms of average daily number of
provisioning) in the remaining days of February 2014, compared to your regular
provisioning rate, shall be construed a breach of this direction.”
From this
audit of the performance of the telecoms operators, the Ministry of
Communications Technology source confirmed that Etisalat met all KPIs for the
month of January and was therefore not sanctioned by NCC.
NCC had in a
letter last December issued a notice of intention to sanction the telecoms
firms, if their quality of service did not improve by December 31, 2013.
It had warned: “If the quality of service does not improve by 31st of December 2013, the commission will be compelled to direct operators to, amongst others, suspend the activation of new SIMs and subscribers until such an operator can prove that it has met the key performance indicators specified in the regulations.”
Tags
Business