Terrorists in the North-East region appear bent of crippling communications in the area with growing attacks on base stations of network providers.
This indication was given by the Vice President, Network Operations, Airtel Nigeria, Dr. Adedoyin Adeola, who said that 282 of his company’s base stations in the North-East region have been bombed by insurgents, resulting in huge revenue loss and poor quality of telecoms service in the region.
Adeola said that telecoms installations across the country are repeatedly vandalised, stolen, bombed and destroyed with reckless abandon, creating myriad of problems for the network operators as well as the telecommunication consumers.
He said that while efforts were being made to re-build 65 out of the 282 bombed facilities, 22 of the rebuilt sites have been bombed again.
He said the problem of poor quality of service and rising spate of drop calls would continue until the government addresses the challenges.
According to him, “Telecoms operators are plagued with so many problems ranging from security issues to illegal signal boosters. While a network provider is working hard to restore a fibre cut due to vandalism or activities of road construction workers, it also has to deal with illegal signal boosters, which interfere with network quality and operated by unlicensed operators.
“Then, all operators would have to wait endlessly for Right of Way approvals, Environmental Impact Analysis (EIA) approvals and other approvals. Also, telecoms installations are huge targets for thieves who cart away inverter batteries, generators, diesels in addition to the other daily and long standing problems of multiple taxation, community issues and all.”
Also speaking, Emeka Oparah, director of Corporate Communications & CSR, Airtel Nigeria, noted that the declaration of telecoms infrastructure as critical national infrastructure by the government would go a long way in helping to safeguard telecoms infrastructure as Airtel alone recorded 1,022 cases of fibre cuts between July 2019 and 11th of February, 2020.
He said that 405 cases of the fibre cut were recorded as a result of road rehabilitation activities by construction workers while 617 cases were due to vandalism.
Oparah, therefore, pleaded that the government should come to the aid of telecoms operators as these activities result in dropped calls, poor network quality, network congestion and poor user experience for telecommunications subscribers across the country.
He also urged the federal and state governments to hasten the approval process for right of way for fibre deployment as well as quicken the EIA approval process, noting that these actions would help solve the problem of network congestion and network failure.