KUALA LUMPUR: The government and private sector have spent over RM100 billion in building telecommunication infrastructure in the country since 1990, Communications and Multimedia Minister Datuk Seri Ahmad Shabery Cheek said.
He said effort to upgrade the 2G to 3G facility needed an investment of up to RM40 billion, which was very costly, hence causing the effort to increase the speed and coverage of broadband service took quite some time to be implemented.
"The first phase of the High Speed Broadband Programme (HSBB1) was implemented at a cost of RM11.3 billion, not including the HSBB2 project and the construction of telecommunication towers," he told reporters after launching the 2015 World Telecommunication and Informative Community Day celebration here today.
He said in line with the 11th Malaysia Plan (11MP), the government would continue building broadband infrastructure, including fiber optic cables, with the cooperation of state governments and private sector to ensure that the country could become a fully-developed nation by 2020.
"Failure is not an option. For a fully-developed nation, having a broadband access is an important foundation to enable various online transactions to be done, such as e-commerce, e-payment, e-government and e-banking," he said.
Ahmad Shabery said in today's world, broadband access was no longer a facility or luxury, as it had turned into a human right that could not be denied.
"If it is slow, it is as if we deny the people's right to broadband service, just like any other utilities," he said.
For that purpose, he said the ministry had also introduced the integrated "Connecting the Unconnected" programme involving its various agencies. -- BERNAMA
Christensen
Money has little value
100b spent to create big value
2015-05-24 22:34