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Strategies & Market Trends : Zeev's Turnips - No Politics -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: westpacific who wrote (49797)4/10/2002 5:31:12 PM
From: westpacific  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 99280
 
GOLD and DOW up, what a F ed up market, upside channel break on all the gold miners!



To: westpacific who wrote (49797)4/10/2002 6:07:14 PM
From: Tassi  Respond to of 99280
 
your baby ANCC will rock..see the end of this PR.. ANCC and Tecore Rocking..Good luck to all
----------------

Afghanistan: First Commercial Mobile-Phone Network
Launched

Afghanistan: First Commercial Mobile-Phone Network
Launched

By Ron Synovitz

The reconstruction of Afghanistan took an important step
forward over the weekend with the launch of the country's
first commercial mobile-phone network. The network is now
available only in Kabul, but plans call for it to be
extended to four other Afghan cities: Kandahar, Herat,
Jalalabad, and Mazar-i-Sharif.

Prague, 8 April 2002 (RFE/RL) -- The importance of the
first commercial mobile-phone system for Afghanistan was
demonstrated by the high-ranking government officials who
attended a weekend ceremony marking the launch of the
network.

The first phone call on the new system was made on 6
April by Afghan interim leader Hamid Karzai. From Kabul,
he phoned Afghanistan's ambassador to the United Nations
in New York.

The new cellular telephone network is being built by the
Afghan Wireless Communication Company -- a firm that is
jointly owned by the Afghan government and a U.S.-based
firm called Telephone Services International. The network
is being jointly operated by AWCC and Afghanistan's
Ministry of Communications.

Karzai's phone call was not the first mobile call to be
made from within Afghanistan. In February, the Swedish
firm Ericsson gave about 200 mobile phones to members of
Karzai's interim administration, as well as to UN
officials in Kabul and nongovernmental organizations that
are involved in emergency relief efforts. But the
Ericsson system -- with its limited capacity and
temporary, six-month operating schedule -- has never been
envisioned as a telephone network for ordinary Afghans.

Karzai's call to New York was the first to be made on a
network that is available to any ordinary Afghan who has
the money to purchase a mobile phone and a pre-paid
calling card.

AWCC managing director Gavin Jeffery describes the launch
of the new phone system as a crucial step toward
rebuilding the Afghan economy through better
communications and access to information. "A reliable
telecommunications service is a necessary part of the
work of rebuilding the economy. We are working with the
Ministry of Communications to provide a facility for
training Afghans -- both for ourselves and for the wider
community -- not only in telecommunications but in all
aspects of business and commercial activity."

Jeffery explains that AWCC's initial plan is for people
to access national and international telephone services
by buying a pre-paid calling card. Those who cannot
afford the $350 charged for the special mobile phones
also can use the system by making calls from public
telephone offices being set up across the country. "We've
gone for essentially a pre-paid platform. So people who
want to use our services will be able to buy telephones
from our outlets. And they will be able to buy refresh
cards as, and when, they want to top out their account to
make calls."

While the system is now available only to callers in
Kabul, Jeffery said his firm is already working to
establish the network in Herat, Kandahar, Jalalabad, and
Mazar-i-Sharif. "Our future plan initially is to get the
GSM system rolled out to the five cities. We will also be
launching within a couple of weeks an upgraded
international system which will give us high-speed data
connection throughout Kabul and the rest of the country.
Following on from that, we'll be installing voice and
data capability in each of the provincial capitals
throughout the country."

So far, Jeffery says, AWCC has already spent about $50
million on building the mobile-phone network. "To date,
we've invested around $50 million. This covers the
equipment that we have already installed in Kabul,
equipment for Herat and Mazar-i-Sharif, which is already
on site -- and site preparation has begun for those
installations -- and also for the equipment for Jalalabad
and Kandahar, which is being assembled in the United
States as we speak."

The schedule contained in the AWCC business plan calls
for Jalalabad to be hooked up to the network in May and
linkups in three other Afghan cities to be available by
the end of this year. Internet cafes are also planned for
each of the five Afghan cities that will eventually be
covered by the network. The first Internet cafe is due to
open in Kabul in July.

Telecommunication services for both the government and
private businesses are critical to the success of
reconstruction efforts in Afghanistan. Authorities at the
Afghan National Bank are now struggling to modernize
their banking system without the ability to connect
computers to the outside world.

Officials at the central bank told RFE/RL that their lack
of computer links is making it difficult to complete even
rudimentary banking tasks. One key task for the bank is
to create a method of transferring millions of dollars of
promised reconstruction aid into Kabul from abroad.

So far, without a reliable wire-transfer system, none of
the $4.5 billion promised in January at the Tokyo
international donors conference has been delivered.

The Afghan mobile-phone project was spearheaded by Ehsan
Bayat, an Afghan emigre who has lived in the United
States since 1979. Bayat founded Telephone International in the United
States after he was first
approached about the project in 1995.

But TSI was blocked from working on the mobile-phone
network under the economic embargo that was imposed
against the Taliban in the late 1990s.

Since the fall of the Taliban and the subsequent lifting
of the international embargo, TSI has brought together
technologies from several U.S. firms, including WorldCom,
TECORE Wireless Systems and AirNet Communications
Corporation. Bayat says, "Two years down the road, we're
going to have over 2,000 Afghans employed by this company
and we'll be less reliant on foreign experts. And I think
by then, we will have played our own role in rebuilding
the economy."

Jeffery says the project has been moving ahead at an
extraordinary pace since last December: "The first plans
were not actually drawn until some time during December.
The first shipments of equipment into the country arrived
in mid-February and we're [launching the system] here at
the beginning of April, which means we've gone from
nothing to an operational system in about three and a
half months."

Indeed, officials at Ericsson say they have also
experienced considerable challenges trying to implement a
communications system in Afghanistan. They note that the
poor condition of roads and electrical systems, as well
as the unreliable existing land-line telephone network,
have left most Afghans virtually cut off from the rest of
the world.

Foreign journalists that have been sending stories and
photographs out of Afghanistan in recent months have been
relying on expensive and bulky satellite telephones. The
most reliable satellite phones cost nearly $8 a minute to
use.

But AWCC officials say they hope that their lower-priced
network will make the system more accessible to Afghans.
A mobile call from Kabul to London on the AWCC network
costs users about $0.50 per minute.

1995-2001 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.,
All Rights Reserved.http://www.rferl.org