Orange Egypt has presented a request to acquire a licence that will allow it to operate fourth-generation mobile phone services in the country of 90 million, an official at Egypt’s telecom regulator said on Thursday.
The official said the regulator was considering the request and would continue its deliberations until October 23.
There was no immediate comment from Orange.
Egypt is selling four 4G licences as part of a long-awaited plan to reform the telecoms sector and to raise money for stretched government finances.
It gave its existing four operators priority to acquire 4G licences, but the only company that took up the offer was Telecom Egypt, the state fixed-line monopoly, which has long sought a way to offer mobile services directly.
Telecom Egypt said in September it was considering buying more spectrum, weeks after acquiring its 4G licence for 7.08 billion Egyptian pounds ($797 million).
The country’s three existing mobile phone operators – Orange, Vodafone and Etisalat – initially all turned down the 4G licences saying the amount of spectrum on offer was not sufficient to allow them to offer 4G services efficiently.
Source: Reuters