OneWorld South Asia Home Today's Headlines Myanmar allows mobile phones in remote capital
OneWorld South Asia OneWorld Network OneWorld South Asia
14 February 2012
Welcome to OneWorld South Asia! We bring together a network of people and groups working on human rights and sustainable development.
Read more here.
 
OWSA Group Websites
Governance Knowledge Centre
EK duniya anEK awaaz
Climate Change Action
Appropriate Technology Choices
Digital Opportunity Channel
Lifelines
OneWorld collaborative projects

Myanmar allows mobile phones in remote capital

Bookmark 
and Share
02 November 2009
 

Having kept the newly constituted administrative capital, Naypyidaw, out of bounds for any kind of telecommunication services ostensibly for security reasons, Myanmar’s military junta has finally allowed the use of mobile phones. Residents, however, are still reluctant to get connections, owing to unaffordable price.

Yangon: Myanmar's authorities have allowed the first mobile phones to be used in its remote capital Naypyidaw after previously banning them for security reasons, residents there said Thursday.

"Mobile phones have been allowed since October 9 around Naypyidaw. We have better communication now," said a hotel staff member in Naypyidaw.

"It's the first time the authorities have allowed a mobile service in Naypyidaw," she said, adding that many hotels had already applied for permission to use the network.

But few people are likely to be able to afford the new service in this impoverished country as she said it cost 1.55 million kyats (nearly 1,500 dollars) to obtain permission from the government's telecommunications department.

Myanmar's ruling generals moved their entire government from the economic hub Yangon to Naypyidaw four years ago, after building the new administrative capital in secret over the previous three years.

Since then military officials have used only walkie-talkies to communicate. When they moved up in November 2005, the city had few phone lines and no grocery stores, schools or clinics.

"We want these basic facilities in the capital. That's why CDMA mobile phones have been allowed, to improve communication," said a senior official in Naypyidaw.

Another official said authorities were planning to open up to a second mobile phone network in the next few months.

The military regime's official explanation for its move to Naypyidaw was to place the capital in a more central location but analysts said the real reason lies in the generals' paranoia about their own security.

The junta's main headquarters is completely hidden inside a hilly compound, open only to military officials.

Myanmar has been ruled by the military since 1962.

This story was first published in AFP.

 
Source : Google
Personal tools
Log in
 
OWSA partner DSDS 2012
 
 
 
 
Supported by:
JICA DFID HIVOS SDC