Myanmar is granting its fourth telecom license to a consortium led by a Vietnamese mobile network operator and including a military-run company, as it looks to further open up its young, but increasingly competitive, telecoms market.
Hanoi-based Viettel Corp is to be the third foreign telco to enter the country, tying up with 11 local firms and an outfit owned by the Myanmar Ministry of Defense, according to a government statement on Friday.
The tender selection for the 15-year license comes just days before an army-backed government is scheduled to cede power to the first civilian administration in decades, led by Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy.
The military’s stake in the venture is likely to fuel running concern that the still-powerful institution is racing to secure its financial clout ahead of the presidential hand-off.
Though it is no longer ruling through an iron-fisted junta, Myanmar’s military remains a mighty force in the impoverished country, with army-linked tycoons still pulling the purse strings in many lucrative industries.
Norway’s Telenor ASA and Qatar’s Ooredoo Group were the first foreign firms to enter the telecoms market in 2014 after reformist ex-generals opened Myanmar’s doors to outside competition.
Before that mobile phones were a luxury few could afford, with a state-owned monopoly selling SIM cards for up to US$1,500.
Today the country is teeming with smart phones, cheap SIMs and a lively Web culture also made possible by a loosening of junta-era censorship laws.
According to government data, Myanmar’s mobile phone penetration rate sky-rocketed from 9.5 to 77.7 percent in just two years after the foreign firms joined, hailed as “a record speed in the history of mobile telecommunications.”
The communications ministry said it hoped the latest competitor would bring more coverage to rural areas, where access remains a challenge due to long-running civil wars between minority ethnic rebels and the military.
The deal with Viettel — which is run by the Vietnamese military and which would take a 49 percent stake in the joint venture — is pending a final round of paperwork and negotiations. A license is expected to be formally granted later this year.
Myanmar has emerged from nearly half a century of brutal junta rule with one of the fastest growing economies in the world, forecast to expand around 8 percent this year.
However, the incoming government still faces significant hurdles, including endemic corruption, widespread poverty and decrepit infrastructure.
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