Corporate News
By MUTHOKI MUMO
Posted Tuesday, July 1 2014 at 11:26
Posted Tuesday, July 1 2014 at 11:26
In Summary
- Safaricom says Equity Bank's overlay SIM cards, which provide dual SIM capability, could expose their M-Pesa subscribers to financial and privacy risks.
- CEO Bob Collymore demands ban pending review of possible risks by GSM Association.
- Equity Bank chief executive says Safaricom’s concerns are baseless and speculative: "They cannot allege (any risks exist) without technical proof."
Equity Bank’s plan to launch telecoms services are at
risk following an objection from Safaricom over the piggy-back
technology the bank intends to use.
In a letter to regulators, Safaricom chief
executive Bob Collymore says Equity Bank should be prohibited from
issuing thin SIM cards as they could expose subscribers to financial
fraud and intercepted communication.
Kenya’s largest mobile company
wants the Communications Authority to invite the GSM Association — which
represents the interests of mobile operators worldwide — to review the
risk posed by the technology to other mobile operators and subscribers.
“In the meantime, we call on the
Communications Authority to prohibit its use in Kenya,” Mr Collymore
says in the letter copied to the Central Bank of Kenya and Equity Bank
through its subsidiary, Finserve.
The SIM in contention is
paper-thin with an embedded chip. Users overlay it on their primary SIM
card, regardless of network, and can then receive services from two
mobile service providers simultaneously. Its use means Equity Bank does
not have to persuade users to abandon their current network to access
their services.
Safaricom says its major concern
is the security of its money transfer service, M-Pesa, which it says
would be vulnerable to attacks.
“It would compromise the security
of the M-Pesa system and consequently expose our 19 million M-Pesa
subscribers to irreparable harm,” says Mr Collymore.
Contacted, Equity Bank chief executive James Mwangi dismissed Safaricom’s concerns as baseless.
In a phone interview, Mr Mwangi
said SIM overlay technology does nothing more than provide dual SIM
capability. The product, he said, is needed if Kenyan subscribers are to
have true choice in telecom services.
“The opposition by Safaricom is
speculative and would require technical proof. To the extent that the
thin SIM has not been rolled out, they cannot allege (any risks exist)
without proof,” he said.
Mr Mwangi said Finserve is on
track to launch telecom services to the mass market this month despite
the concerns raised by Safaricom and a court case by the Consumer
Federation of Kenya (Cofek).
Equity’s banking agents, staff and the families of staff members will be issued with SIM overlay cards on 10 July.
Safaricom presents the latest
round of opposition to Equity’s ambitions to make an entry into the
telecommunication sector. Cofek has filed a case in the High Court,
questioning the manner in which Equity Bank and two other firms were
granted licences by the Communications Authority to become mobile
virtual network operators (MVNOs). Cofek's concerns echo those raised by
Telecommunication Service Providers of Kenya in May.
Finserve Africa Ltd was in April
granted an MVNO licence alongside Mobile Pay Ltd and Zioncell. Equity
Bank plans to use the Finserve licence to roll out mobile banking
services independent of any operator. Customers will also be given data
and voice services on the network. Anticipating reluctance from some of
its 8.7 million customers to migrate to the new network, Finserve said
that it would give customers the option of using an overlay SIM card.
CLICK HERE to read the full report in the Daily Nation's Smart Company pull-out.
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