Corporate News
By MUGAMBI MUTEGI
In Summary
- Customers on the Sh1,000 and Sh2,500 post-paid plans will lose all unspent bundles accumulated since the product was launched in 2011.
- Users are expected to use all their existing resources (minutes, SMS and data) before they expire and become unavailable on May 26, 2015.
Safaricom subscribers on the Karibu post-pay tariff
will lose all unused airtime, SMS credits and data from their old plans
on May 26 this year.
Bundles received from that date on will
expire after 30 days, ending the unlimited accumulation of airtime and
data that made the Karibu tariff the telecom operator’s most popular
post-paid option.
The telecoms services firm has
announced that, beginning midnight on May 26th, customers on the Sh1,000
and Sh2,500 post-paid plans will lose all unspent bundles accumulated
since the product was launched in 2011.
Safaricom, which considered
terminating the closed tariff entirely, promised to keep it on earlier
this year and offer its over 140,000 subscribers new terms. No new
subscribers are being accepted.
The mobile giant has left the
monthly charges for the two plans unchanged, as well as retained their
call times, text message credits and data bundles.
“The changes mean that all
subscribers on the (Karibu) PostPay 1000 and PostPay 2500 bundles will
be expected to have used all their existing resources (minutes, SMS and
data) before they expire and become unavailable on May 26, 2015,” the
telecom operator said in a notice to its subscribers.
“After that date, the subscribers
will continue to enjoy the existing Karibu PostPay bundles and will
receive the same amount of minutes, SMS and data which will be renewed
on a monthly basis, with any unused resources automatically expiring
after 30 days.”
The Karibu tariff has two price
plans. For Sh1,000 per month, a subscriber gets 900 minutes talk time
for on-net calls, 100 minutes for off-net calls, 100 megabytes of data
and 100 on-net SMSes.
For the Sh2,500 per month
package, subscribers get 2,200 minutes for Safaricom-to-Safaricom calls,
300 minutes to rival networks, 250 megabytes of data and 250 on-net
text messages.
The revised tariff will be a
bitter-sweet pill to swallow for subscribers who now have just 27 days
to clear accumulated talk time bundles that, especially for early
enrollers, run into tens of thousands of minutes.
Many will be glad, however, at
the decision to retain the tariff at the same price and bundles, given
the more drastic measures feared when the tariff revision was first
announced a year ago.
Safaricom CEO Bob Collymore has
in the past described the Karibu tariff as promotional, saying its
loss-making run since launch made it a candidate for termination.
The low revenues from the tariff
were attributable to the fact that Karibu subscribers pay less than one
shilling per minute to make calls, compared to Safaricom customers on
pre-paid plans who pay about Sh4 a minute for calls made during peak
hours (8am and 10pm).
On May 25 last year, the telecom
firm announced the tariff termination adding that it would no longer be
accepting subscriptions from new subscribers.
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