In short
The decision to lift the ban was reached in a meeting in the Conference hall of parliament involving the speaker, Rebecca Kadaga, telecom companies, members of parliament, the Information Communication and Technology-ICT Minister, Frank Tumwebaze and Uganda Communications Commission officials.
Government has bowed to pressure from parliament and lifted the ban on Airtime scratch cards. The decision to lift the ban was reached in a meeting in the Conference hall of parliament involving the speaker, Rebecca Kadaga, telecom companies, members of parliament, the Information Communication and Technology-ICT Minister, Frank Tumwebaze and Uganda Communications Commission officials.
UCC set July 31st 2108 as the deadline for phasing out airtime scratch cards across all networks. It follows concerns from security that scratch card vending is directly linked to the sale of illegally registered simcards, which are dependent on scratch cards that can't easily be traced.
However, MPs opposed the proposal, saying the move would impact heavily on rural phone users given the limited penetration of electronic airtime vending. On Thursday, MPs asked Government to suspend the ban and leave the matter to market forces.
During the meeting, the Rakai Woman MP, Juliet Suubi Kinyamatama argued that scratch cards are still available even in the developed and there was no need for Uganda to scrap them. She said many people cannot access mobile money services and easy load points, which would violate their rights to communication.
//Cue in: "Where there is…
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Kadaga, who chaired the session, said the telecom companies didn't give adequate explanation for scrapping the airtime scratch cards and that government hadn't done adequate research on scratch cards and their accessibility.
//Cue in: "I did not…
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The ICT Minister, Frank Tumwebaze, said they had agreed to leave the matter to market forces of demand and supply.
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Wim Vanhelleputte, the Chief Executive Officer MTN Uganda, says they will go with the government decision. He however, asked Ugandans to embrace electronic airtime recharge.
//Cue in: "We don't have…
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The ban on the airtime scratch cards had also threatened to throw hundreds of people involved in their sale out of business.
UCC set July 31st 2108 as the deadline for phasing out airtime scratch cards across all networks. It follows concerns from security that scratch card vending is directly linked to the sale of illegally registered simcards, which are dependent on scratch cards that can't easily be traced.
However, MPs opposed the proposal, saying the move would impact heavily on rural phone users given the limited penetration of electronic airtime vending. On Thursday, MPs asked Government to suspend the ban and leave the matter to market forces.
During the meeting, the Rakai Woman MP, Juliet Suubi Kinyamatama argued that scratch cards are still available even in the developed and there was no need for Uganda to scrap them. She said many people cannot access mobile money services and easy load points, which would violate their rights to communication.
//Cue in: "Where there is…
Cue out:…not registered simcard"//
Kadaga, who chaired the session, said the telecom companies didn't give adequate explanation for scrapping the airtime scratch cards and that government hadn't done adequate research on scratch cards and their accessibility.
//Cue in: "I did not…
Cue out:…is your assessment"//
The ICT Minister, Frank Tumwebaze, said they had agreed to leave the matter to market forces of demand and supply.
//Cue in: "I have directed…
Cue out:…on the market"//
Wim Vanhelleputte, the Chief Executive Officer MTN Uganda, says they will go with the government decision. He however, asked Ugandans to embrace electronic airtime recharge.
//Cue in: "We don't have…
Cue out:…can load airtime"//
The ban on the airtime scratch cards had also threatened to throw hundreds of people involved in their sale out of business.