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TRAI Close To Penalising Telecom Firms For Call Drop Violations In March Quarter

Violation of call drop rules may soon put telecom operators in trouble.

Mobile phone telecommunications towers stand in Mumbai. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)
Mobile phone telecommunications towers stand in Mumbai. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)

The Telecom Regulatory Authority Of India is in the final stages of slapping a penalty on operators who have not met call drop norms for the quarter ended March 2018, its Chairman RS Sharma said.

Maintaining its watch on service quality in the sector, TRAI had tightened the rules and asked players to abide by its new quality of service benchmarks from October 1, 2017. Two quarters of assessment has been completed since the new norms came into force.

"For the quarter of January to March, we are in the final stage of issuing the penalty," Sharma told PTI. He said that showcause notices have already been issued to erring operators and 21 days have been given for submitting their responses. He. however, did not identify the operators, saying TRAI did not want to name and shame any player.

The assessment is based on network performance of operators between January and March, measured against the TRAI’s new service quality benchmarks.

The "financial disincentive" has already been levied for December 2017 quarter, Sharma added.

Under the new rules, call drops are measured at mobile tower level instead of telecom circle level. TRAI was of the view that average calculated at circle level may hide many issues.

TRAI proposed financial disincentive in the range of Rs 1-5 lakh in a graded penalty system depending on the performance of a network, with stringent fines for repeat violations under the new Quality of Service rules. However, there is cap of Rs 10 lakh on financial disincentive.

Besides, earlier rules did not address temporary issues in telecom network like non-functioning of mobile towers or geographical issues like network quality in an underserved town. Many other parameters too were tightened, and the regulator also fixed benchmark for radio-link time out technology – purportedly used by operators for masking call drops.

When contacted, industry body COAI’s director-general, Rajan Mathews said new QoS rules are among the most stringent globally, and that telecom operators in India have make required investments to ensure compliance with the norms.