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China Mobile settles anti-trust case

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CIOL Bureau
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BEIJING, CHINA: China Mobile, the world's largest mobile carrier, agreed to pay 1,000 yuan ($146) to a subscriber to settle a lawsuit over its mandatory fees, potentially opening the door to a flood of similar complaints.

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The case, one of the first to find in favour of the plaintiff after the landmark anti-monopoly law in China came into effect last year, was settled out of court on Friday, said the lawyer who filed the suit.

"This means (China Mobile) acknowledges its pricing structure has a problem," Zhou Ze, the Beijing-based lawyer, told Reuters. "Today there are many China Mobile users who want me to represent them in similar suits."

China Mobile did not respond to repeated requests for comment.

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The complaint alleged that China Mobile abused its dominant position by charging high-end users who do not use pre-paid cards a 50 yuan monthly rental fee.

China Mobile has more than half a billion mobile users, commanding over 70 per cent of the domestic market. It made a total of 8.4 billion yuan from monthly fees in the first half of 2009, accounting for 3.9 per cent of total revenues, according to its interim report.

"The impact is minimal and we don't expect many customers will file lawsuits after this test case," said Marvin Lo, Director, Asian Equity Research at Daiwa Securities.

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