In the event, he said Trai had asked the government to investigate the allegation that Reliance was passing off international calls as local ones in order to avoid paying BSNL the access deficit charge -- under the law, for all incoming international calls, operators have to pay BSNL Rs 4.25 a minute, and since this is around 8090 per cent of any companys revenue from incoming calls, few are keen to pay this if they can avoid it.
Whats ironic is the day Baijals letter was published, The Financial Express had a story quoting a senior official as saying the government was not likely to interfere because «it is a fight between operators and they alone should resolve the matter.» Apart from the fact that a bilateral solution could well mean a political Apart from the fact that a government investigation is bad in law (since the government owns BSNL, there is a conflict of interests and thats why Trai was created), the reason why Trai needs to investigate the matter, by getting more staffers if need be, is that the law mandates this. Section 11 (1) (b) of the Trai Act says Trai has to ensure compliance with the terms and conditions of the licence, and regulate the sharing of revenue (such as the ADC) between operators. And Section 13 of the same Act says Trai can issue policy directions to ensure its orders under Section 11 are complied with. And, to address the implicit issue in Mr Baijals now famous «I am a regulator, not a policeman» quote, the investigation may not prove to be that difficult either since the law has ensured this. Under 12 (1) (a), Trai can call any service provider «to furnish in writing» any explanation it wants, and every person in that company «shall be bound» to produce «all such books of account or other documents … (that have) a bearing» on the matter. Indeed, the international When it has to pay Rs 4.25 as ADC, 23 cents (Rs 1.15) for carrying the call to India, and another 30 paise as termination charges to the telephone firm in India to whose lines the calls are being made -- its bilateral agreements for bulk minutes with global carriers are even cheaper, by 1520 per cent. Under Section 12, if it wishes, Trai can even summon global According to VSNLs latest annual report, the size of this grey market is 3040 per cent, or around Rs 2,100 crore (Rs 21 billion) annually. Ironically, Trai itself says the ADC for international calls encourages the grey market and lowering this is the only solution. In its ADC order of October 29, 2003, it says: "The authority considers that the origination/termination charge for international calls has to serve the objectives of … a reduction of the grey area traffic. . . " In another place, it says: «The Authority has decided to reduce the ADC component for the international And in its latest consultation paper on ADC, apart from repeating some of the Even if you assume the need to have an ADC (a bad idea, since it amounts to a subsidy), as Trais latest paper itself says, the solution is a simple one. Instead of having such hugely differential Also, since phone companies get a flat If you allow them the freedom to negotiate this rate, however, no company will allow others to masquerade international calls as local ones -- believe me, all phone companies know where the illegal traffic is coming from. Forget the phone companies with all their sophisticated equipment, even I know when Im getting a grey call on my cellphone -- either the