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Govt initiates steps to address call drops problem

Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) is being asked to seek details from telecom operators about their infrastructure and capacity to provide effective services

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NEW DELHI, September 1: With Prime Minister Narendra Modi voicing concern over call drops, the government has initiated pro-active steps to address the problem, with regulator Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) being asked to seek details from telecom operators about their infrastructure and capacity to provide effective services. The TRAI will soon ask telecom companies to disclose information related to their services which would be publicised so that customers are aware of capacity of their operator and enable them to choose their service provider. "It is a national concern. While I appreciate the role of telecom operators in the expansion of mobile network in India, it is equally important for them to reinforce the infrastructure so that people may not have the call drop problems," Telecom Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad said today. "On behalf of the government, we have requested the TRAI to kindly consider the desirability of having a framework in which every operator is required to publicly inform the number of consumers they are having and the capacity of their infrastructure to take load of that number," he added. Prasad told reporters that the government is quite serious on the issue and even the Prime Minister has expressed his concern over call drops. TRAI (Telecom Regulatory Authority of India) Chairman R S Sharma told PTI, "First of all they have to disclose this information to us. TRAI has the authority to call for information relating to service, they will provide the information, which we will publish so ultimately public will get the information." He said the regulator is preparing a status or information paper which gives a detailed analysis of the extent of call drops especially in two cities of Delhi and Mumbai on the basis of data available and the regulator will publish it. "So essentially that will bring out not only the extent of call drops, it will also bring out the potential causes of call drops and therefore the operators what the operators should do will come out of that," Sharma added. The move is part of Department of Telecom's (DoT) efforts to curb the menace of call drops and also let people to make a concerted decision while choosing a operator. Modi had last week voiced serious concern over the menace of call drops and asked officials concerned to take urgent steps to address it as it affects the common people. The Prime Minister is believed to have told Telecom Secretary Rakesh Garg personally that people get irritated due to call drops and "curse the government" and this needs to be addressed on war-footing, the sources said.