TechWorld/Foreign News

Benin, Ghana agree to free roaming for travelers

Benin and Ghana have agreed to implement free roaming, in order to reduce communication costs for citizens traveling between the two countries.

This development follows the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding between Benin’s Electronic Communications and Postal Regulatory Authority (ARCEP) and Ghana’s National Communications Authority (NCA).

The ARCEP states that the two West African countries decided to put the memorandum into effect on July 1, 2024, which will significantly lower roaming costs for customers in Ghana and Benin.

This development aligns with the ECOWAS regulations on roaming within the Community’s public mobile communication networks, introduced in Praia, Cape Verde, in October 2017 and had a dragged implementation due to several challenges, including the absence of direct links between telecom operators, high call termination rates, and fraud.

In a May 2023 interview with BusinessDay, the Executive Secretary of the West Africa Telecommunications Regulators Assembly (WATRA), Aliyu Yusuf Aboki, said 13 ECOWAS member states have modified their telecom legislation to exempt roaming surcharges.

Harmonizing tariff regulations, he continued, tends to facilitate trade against the backdrop of the many cross-border trade challenges, particularly those related to connectivity and data access.

“I believe it would boost trade and economic activities, and in terms of the digital economy, it would open a lot of doors for more businesses to thrive, especially SMEs. When traders arrive in any country in West Africa, they can continue using their phones to do business – check prices, communicate with staff, suppliers, partners, etc – without bothering about higher costs,” he further said.

(Techpoint Africa)

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