Breaking: MTN to Start Charges on USSD Voice, Text Messages
MTN
Nigeria says it will go ahead to charge its customers for Unstructured
Supplementary Service Data (USSD) voice or text message which allows them
access to bank services via their mobile phones.
The telecom said it would start charging its subscribers from today, despite a
directive by the Federal Government to halt the plan.
MTN’s subscribers on Sunday received messages from the company informing them that with effect from today, it will start charging them N4 per 20 seconds for USSD voice or N4 for text message. One of the messages from MTN read: ‘’Yello, as requested by your bank, from Oct 21, we will start charging you directly for USSD access to banking services. Please contact your bank for more info.’’ In yet another message, it said: “Yello, please note that from Oct 21, we will charge N4 per seconds for USSD access to banking services. Thank you.’’
But most of its customers reacted negatively to the new charge, saying it is exploitative. They therefore complained to the Minister of Communications Dr Isa Ali Panatmi via his twitter handle @DrIsaPantami, calling on the minister to rein in on MTN. Dr Pantami answered one of them, saying he has directed NCC to ask MTN to halt the planned charge. ‘’Many thanks for drawing my attention to it.
MTN’s subscribers on Sunday received messages from the company informing them that with effect from today, it will start charging them N4 per 20 seconds for USSD voice or N4 for text message. One of the messages from MTN read: ‘’Yello, as requested by your bank, from Oct 21, we will start charging you directly for USSD access to banking services. Please contact your bank for more info.’’ In yet another message, it said: “Yello, please note that from Oct 21, we will charge N4 per seconds for USSD access to banking services. Thank you.’’
But most of its customers reacted negatively to the new charge, saying it is exploitative. They therefore complained to the Minister of Communications Dr Isa Ali Panatmi via his twitter handle @DrIsaPantami, calling on the minister to rein in on MTN. Dr Pantami answered one of them, saying he has directed NCC to ask MTN to halt the planned charge. ‘’Many thanks for drawing my attention to it.
We have directed NCC to ask MTN to suspend the plan. “We are not aware
of it officially. We will investigate and make sure right thing is done. Best
wishes’’, the minister said. But a top official said that the telecom would
still go ahead to introduce the charge, Daily Trust reports. The official who
pleaded anonymity because he was not officially cleared to speak to the press
said it introduced the charge on the directive of Bankers Committee. “Other
telecom operators have been charging their customers for USSD before they could
access their banks’ services; we are the last to introduce it.
“Bank Committees
with the knowledge of CBN told us to charge the customers directly. Before it
was the banks that deducted the whole charge, now it was agreed in a meeting
with CBN knowledge that we should now charge N4 directly, and that the banks
should charge their customers the rest. “It should be N22: we charge N4 and
they should deduct the remaining. But as it is now, the banks are still taking
the whole N22.” Meanwhile, the CBN has told banks to yank off businesses from
telecommunication operators charging bank customers using USSD to make
transactions.
The CBN Governor, Mr. Godwin Emefiele said this during a press
briefing at the sidelines of the World Bank/IMF meetings in Washington DC. He
explained that “about five months ago, I held a meeting with some telecom
companies as well as the leading banks in Nigeria and the issue of USSD came
up. “At that time, we came to conclusion that the use of USSD is a sunk cost
which is not an additional cost on the infrastructure of the telecom companies.
“But the telecoms companies disagreed with us and said it’s an additional
investment and they needed to impose it. I appeal to them that they should
review it downwards and they refused’ he said.
Explaining further Mr. Emefiele
said: “I understand that three or four weeks ago, rather than reduce it, they
went ahead to increase it by 300 percent. I opposed it and I have told the
banks that we will not allow this to happen.
“The banks are the people who give this business to the telecoms companies and I leave the banks and the telecom companies to engage.
“The banks are the people who give this business to the telecoms companies and I leave the banks and the telecom companies to engage.
“I have told the banks
that they have to move their business, move their traffic to a telecom company
that is ready to provide it at the lowest possible if not zero cost”. That’s
where we stand and we must achieve it.’’ He said the telco’s decision will
impede financial inclusion.
(NAN)
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