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Enterprise > Mobility > News
Cell phone coverage gets closer to border
Operators can now extend services within the 'Service Zone' set by the government
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Border still buzzing uncertainty

Thursday, March 1, 2007

NEW DELHI: The government has relaxed security norms allowing cellular mobile service up to 500 meters of the country’s international borders.

The Ministry of Home had barred operators to offer mobile services up to 10 km along the International border of India on grounds of national security.

According to an official notification issued by the Department of Telecommunications (DoT), there shall be a ‘No Service Zone’ of 500 meters width along the international border within Indian territory for wireless, mobile service, where the licensee(s) are not permitted to provide wireless, mobile service. The licensee shall use requisite technology to ensure that the signals become unusable within 500 meters of international boundaries and there shall be no wireless or mobile service in the ‘Service Zone’.

The notification said, “the licensee shall create a zone control, line of actual control, Akhnoor and Pathankot areas in Jammu and Kashmir, wherein they shall not deploy their cell sites, BTSs and radio transmitter(s).”

There have been reports that barring the Indian mobile operators to connect the bordering areas has forced the Indian residents to use mobile service from the operators across the borders. There are instances of Indian residents accessing Bangladesh mobile services. Signals of a number of cell-phone-service providers in Bangladesh can be accessed in Karimganj and Cachar districts of Assam.

Following media reports, the Home Ministry informed parliament, “anti-national elements, smugglers and other miscreants, active along the Indo-Bangladesh Border on both sides use the Bangladesh mobile rural phone service. The signals are available on the Indian side in places up to several kilometers, depending upon the terrain of the area.”

© CyberMedia News

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