Cereta 5
Group H
Kayangan 3–5 Siovanija and Teusland
The state-owned Kayangan Telecommunications Company Limited (KayTel) which two Kayangan player, Andak Mambang Di Awan as General Manager, and Taat Obor Kelubi as Deputy Finance Manager was created in 1994 when the country’s postal and telecommunication services were separated. Jointly owned by the Kayangan government and private investors, KayTel is regulated by the Kayangan Communications Act 1993, which grants it legal monopoly over all landline installation and administration. While many private companies are sub-contracted by KayTel, it is thus the sole provider of basic fixed services in the Kayangan mainland, and the main gateway to international exchanges. Mobile Telecommunications Company Limited (Montel) has meanwhile been licensed to provide services in mobile sector. Following privatization attempts, KayTel has been strengthened in its status as an GLC.
While the number of fixed line operators in the country has not changed over the past decade, providers of other telecom services (licensed by the Kayangan Communication Regulatory Authority) have considerably increased: in 2012 Kayangan has eight licensed mobile phone operators, and data operators and internet service providers increased from 25 to 80 over 2004, currently mobile phone penetration in Kayangan stands at around 77%, and the number of mobile subscribers has risen by 22% over the past year, reaching 25.6 million by May 2012. Mobile banking is also on the rise since 2008, with KayTel-Paid as Kayangan's leading mobile payment services provider: the number of sim-cards registered for banking have almost doubled over 2010-2011. Likewise the number of internet users rose from 5.3 million in December 2011 to 6 million by May 2012. Mobile subscriptions now make up close to the totality of telephone subscriptions in the country, while fixed line subscriptions have only grown by 43% (compared to over 600% for mobiles) since 1998. This is indicative not only of the change in technology, but also of the poor running of the fixed-line telecommunications sector to date
And, oh yes, we will be at a sharp edge when facing HUElavia on next game. The VVIP Boys must wake and strengthen their will if they want further more.
MD6
vs. HUElavia (16)