Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
08MONROVIA435
2008-06-03 09:15:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Embassy Monrovia
Cable title:  

LIBERIA: CELL PHONE COMPANIES FEND OFF REGULATOR

Tags:  ECPS EINV ECON AORC LI 
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VZCZCXRO9687
RR RUEHMA RUEHPA
DE RUEHMV #0435/01 1550915
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 030915Z JUN 08
FM AMEMBASSY MONROVIA
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 0076
RUCPDOC/USDOC WASHDC
INFO RUEHZK/ECOWAS COLLECTIVE
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 MONROVIA 000435 

SENSITIVE
SIPDIS

DEPARTMENT FOR AF/W AND EEB/CIP/BA

E.O. 12598: N/A
TAGS: ECPS EINV ECON AORC LI
SUBJECT: LIBERIA: CELL PHONE COMPANIES FEND OFF REGULATOR

REF A) MONROVIA 165
B) 07 MONROVIA 987 Telecom Act

UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 MONROVIA 000435

SENSITIVE
SIPDIS

DEPARTMENT FOR AF/W AND EEB/CIP/BA

E.O. 12598: N/A
TAGS: ECPS EINV ECON AORC LI
SUBJECT: LIBERIA: CELL PHONE COMPANIES FEND OFF REGULATOR

REF A) MONROVIA 165
B) 07 MONROVIA 987 Telecom Act


1. (SBU) Summary: Since passage of the Telecommunications Law a
year ago (ref B),the Liberia Telecommunications Authority (LTA) has
demonstrated a lack of sophistication in regulating the sector. The
Embassy, with other international partners, has raised concerns with
the GOL regarding LTA's heavy-handed approach, which has the
potential to discourage new investors and limit the willingness of
current firms to invest in new technology. There is a temporary
truce in the LTA's high-profile campaign to raise money from the
four cell phone companies, and the President has assured us
everything is under control. However, renegotiating GSM contracts
has not yet begun and we are concerned that in addition to tainting
the investment climate, LTA's crude approach may hamper growth of
the sector and development in other areas such as access to fiber
optic cables or universal access (Ref A). End summary.

The Imperial Regulator
--------------


2. (U) The Liberia Telecommunications Authority (LTA) is conducting
a very public campaign to extract huge fees from Liberia's GSM cell
phone companies. The first salvo, in early April, was a demand from
LTA Chairman Albert Bropleh for $150,000 within less than a week
from each company as a "license application" fee. As the cell phone
companies all have valid licenses they saw no reason to pay such a
fee. The disagreement deteriorated to a campaign in the press
designed to convince Liberians they are being cheated by the cell
phone companies. The cell phone companies have responded in kind,
with full page ads and placing articles suggesting that LTA demands
will lead to higher charges.


3. (SBU) Embassy Monrovia has had first-hand experience as a target
of LTA's efforts to secure unrealistic payments; during the POTUS
visit in early February, LTA presented the Embassy with an
unsubstantiated charge for $40,000. (We bargained them down to
$22,000.) Bropleh is using similar tactics with the private sector.


Independence equals Impunity
--------------


4. (SBU) The 2007 Telecommunications Law (Ref B) established LTA as

an independent regulatory agency under the policy guidance of the
Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications, with a top priority of
standardizing existing GSM licenses. While there is ambiguity on
the status of the GSM licenses, (Ref B) World Bank telecom experts
who advised on the legislation tell us the existing licenses remain
valid until they are renegotiated and that the renegotiation is
intended to be collaborative. (Note: according to the law, LTA was
supposed to have concluded renegotiation and standardization of the
licenses within 90 days of passage of the law. End note.)


5. (SBU) While LTA's crude fundraising campaign reflects the lack of
regulatory experience, the fact that these tactics can be conducted
without check from other GOL agencies indicates a troubling weakness
in the emerging regulatory framework. LTA's lack of consultation
with the industry is mirrored by its lack of consultation within the
GOL, including with the Minister of Posts and Telecommunications,
who has responsibility for policy oversight. In an April 16 meeting
with the Ambassador, the Minister of Posts and Telecom noted the LTA
has said it reports only to the President. MPT is trying to engage
the LTA commissioners and be more aware of regulatory initiatives.
In a May 13 meeting with the International Contact Group on Liberia,
after a month of acrimonious media exchanges and a legislative
hearing, President Sirleaf described LTA's tactics as "just working
things out," and noted that the problem had been resolved.

Private sector investment is essential
--------------


6. (SBU) During the April 16 meeting at MPT, the Ambassador noted
that a healthy and profitable GSM sector is important to Liberia's
continued growth. As payments to the GOL from cell phone service
providers increase, the government could dedicate some of the
revenue to providing universal service. Sharply increased license
fees for LTA, by squeezing profits, will reduce tax payments and
investment. Ambassador added that it is important that there be a
strong firewall between the regulator (LTA) and the proposed
state-owned Liberia Telecommunications Corporation (LTC),or it will
undermine confidence. The MPT officials said they see LTC as the
backbone of the telecommunications system but realize it will need
to be privatized at some point. (Comment: We are skeptical of GOL
assurances that LTC will not compete with the private sector. A
"national security" justification for special treatment for LTC has
been made by some in the GOL. End note)

Comment

MONROVIA 00000435 002 OF 002


--------------


7. (SBU) The GOL is right that all agreements signed by the
transitional government ought to be reviewed and harmonized.
However, despite physical security problems and the need to
self-generate electricity, the GSM companies built an efficient and
competitive sector in a country with no land-line phones, and
extremely limited access to other communications. They contribute
8% of GDP and 18% of the budget but are under siege from the
regulator-turned-revenue-agency.


8. (SBU) Chairman Bropleh, his most experienced commissioner, and
the Minister of Posts and Telecom, have been invited to attend the
regional ICT conference in Accra July 8-10. We hope exposure to
more experienced regulators and industry best-practice may have a
seasoning effect on his leadership. LTA's aggressive tactics
continue the tradition of focusing on large, successful firms for
revenue and reflect the lack of internal GOL coordination. While
the GOL can make a credible case for the presumption that any
agreement signed by the 2003-2005 transitional government is flawed,
Liberia has a critical need for GSM revenue and for future
investment, and LTA's tactics jeopardize both.

BOOTH