Shocked telcos may go for review

They have been unfairly treated, claim the companies

February 02, 2012 06:14 pm | Updated December 04, 2021 11:09 pm IST - New Delhi

A school boy speaks on a phone at a shop with its walls displaying advertisements for Idea Cellular, in Mumbai, India, Thursday, Feb. 2, 2012. India's top court ordered the government on Thursday to cancel 122 cellphone licenses granted to companies during an irregular sale of spectrum that has been branded one of the largest scandals in India's history. The license cancellation affects 11 companies including Idea, who will lose a handful of licenses giving them the right to operate in several cities. (AP Photo/Rajanish Kakade)

A school boy speaks on a phone at a shop with its walls displaying advertisements for Idea Cellular, in Mumbai, India, Thursday, Feb. 2, 2012. India's top court ordered the government on Thursday to cancel 122 cellphone licenses granted to companies during an irregular sale of spectrum that has been branded one of the largest scandals in India's history. The license cancellation affects 11 companies including Idea, who will lose a handful of licenses giving them the right to operate in several cities. (AP Photo/Rajanish Kakade)

Jolted by the Supreme Court's judgment that cancelled 122 telecom licences issued in 2008, new operators on Thursday expressed shock over the verdict and indicated that they may file review petition.

The affected companies whose licences are cancelled include Uninor (joint venture between Unitech and Telenor of Norway), Sistema—Shyam (joint venture between Shyam Telecom and Sistema of Russia), Videocon, Loop Telecom, Idea Cellular, Etisalat DB (joint venture between DB Realty and Etisalat of UAE).

Sistema-Shyam, which offers mobile services under the MTS brand and Unitech-Telenor joint venture that provides services under brand Uninor have made huge investments for rolling out the services across the nation.

The companies have said that they have been unfairly treated claiming that they simply followed the government process for acquiring licences.

“Sistema-Shyam is still awaiting the full text of the judgment... The company would like to state that being a law abiding organisation, it reserves the right to protect its interests by using all available judicial remedies,” SSTL said in a statement.

Uninor expressed shock on the verdict and said, “We have been penalised for faults the court has found in the government process.”

The new licences bundled with 2G spectrum were issued by former telecom minister A. Raja in January 2008 for Rs.1,651 crore for a pan-India licence. On this, the government auditor CAG had assumed a presumptive loss of revenue of up to Rs.1.76-lakh crore to the Exchequer.

According to estimates, cancellation of these licences may free about 500 Mhz of 2G spectrum which may be auctioned by the government.

Leading service provider Idea Cellular said the company was unnecessarily caught in this situation of cancelled licences just because they were granted in January, 2008, which was as late as 18 months from the date of application. “It is unfortunate that a senior incumbent operator like Idea Cellular is being made to suffer due to this cancellation of licences, despite being fully compliant at each stage of the licence allocation process,” Idea Cellular said in its reaction.

Norway-based Telenor, majority stake holder in Uninor, said, “We look to the government to arrive at a fair outcome that doesn't jeopardise our lawful investments.”

Sistema-Shyam claims to have invested over $2.5 billion (about Rs.12,500 crore) so far for acquiring licences and rolling out services.

Telenor claims to have already invested over Rs.6,100 crore in equity and over Rs.8,000 crore in corporate guarantees as a foreign investor that trusts a licence stamped by the Government of India.

Reacting to the Supreme Court verdict, UAE-based Etisalat said, “The company will work closely with Etisalat DB's management and legal counsel to understand the judgment, its ramifications on the operations of the company, particularly its customers and employees as well as its right to a review of the Supreme Court decision.”

Meanwhile, Aircel and Vodafone said that their licences have not fallen under the list.

“DB Realty is in the business of real estate development and has no direct or indirect shareholding in Etisalat DB,” DB Realty said in a statement.

STel said that after the Supreme Court verdict, “we feel like a victim caught in a riot”.

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