Shillong, Nov 17 :
Altogether 8,621 villages in the Northeast out of 9,190 unconnected ones
will be provided mobile connections under a central plan to bridge the
connectivity gap and improve rural telecom infrastructure of the region.
The project will also provide seamless connectivity to national highways through 321 mobile towers.
According to the reply by Union
communications and IT minister Ravi Shankar Prasad recently to Tura MP
P.A. Sangma’s letter, more than 900 villages in West, East and South
Garo Hills districts of Meghalaya are proposed to be covered under the
Comprehensive Telecom Development Plan for the Northeast.
“The Centre is committed to providing
mobile connectivity in rural and remote areas of the country.
To bridge the connectivity gap and improve telecom infrastructure, a Comprehensive Telecom Development Plan for the Northeast has been approved by the government,” Prasad said.
To bridge the connectivity gap and improve telecom infrastructure, a Comprehensive Telecom Development Plan for the Northeast has been approved by the government,” Prasad said.
The villages of Garo hills will be covered by 2G mobile connections under the plan, he added.
Garo hills is an example of the low mobile connectivity being experienced in the region.
There are hundreds of areas in the Northeast, which are yet to experience the “telecom revolution” in a befitting way.
Sangma, in his letter to Prasad, said the
Northeast requires special attention not only because of existing poor
connectivity in the region but also because of the sensitivity of the
region, as 98 per cent of the northeastern states’ borders are shared
with other countries.
While referring to various villages in
Garo hills, which do not have any form of mobile connectivity yet, but
have sufficient population to make connectivity viable, Sangma said,
“There are some areas along the border with Bangladesh where people are
using mobile networks available from Bangladesh due to unavailability of
any Indian service provider.”
Sangma said using Bangladesh mobile
networks was not only inconvenient for the people in view of the high
cost they have to incur, but also unsafe “in terms of people, including
BSF jawans manning the border”.
On September 10, the Union cabinet had
approved the telecom plan for the Northeast, which entails an estimated
expenditure of Rs 5,336.18 crore, to be funded from the Universal
Service Obligation Fund (USOF).
The USOF would fund capital expenditure (CAPEX) and operational expenditure (OPEX) of net revenue for a period of five years.
The project also seeks to increase the
connection reliability of the district and state headquarters across the
region by providing alternative optical fibre connectivity.
This will ensure that notwithstanding any
problem in one route, the voice and data transfer through other routes
will keep the district and state headquarters connected.
The project is aimed at covering the
uncovered villages in the Northeast and to maintain seamless
connectivity on national highways in the region.
At present, there are 43,200 villages in
the Northeast. Of this, 8,621 villages (20 per cent) of the unconnected
9,190 villages will be covered through 6,673 towers.
The Indian telecom network is the second
largest in the world after China. As on March this year, the country has
933.02 million telephone connections, including 904.52 million wireless
telephone connections, with an overall teledensity of 75.23 per cent.
While the urban teledensity is an impressive 145.46 per cent, the rural teledensity is a mere 44.01 per cent.
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