#سكر_خطك: Why I’m Closing My Alfa & Touch Lines Today

 

sakker-khattak

Over the past few days, we’ve all seen the above screen-grab in one way or another asking Lebanese citizens to stop using Alfa and Touch’s mobile services on Sunday January 8th, in an attempt to raise awareness and fight the horrifying corruption infesting our telecommunication sector.

Lebanon has one of the highest telecommunication prices in the region and the world. For comparison, the average prepaid monthly recharge in Lebanon is around $25 while it’s around $7 in other Arab countries. The services we get with our recharges are also abysmal: a minute is 25 cents, a text is 5 cents and mobile internet is recharged separately at rates that are exorbitant: $23 for 5GB on Alfa and $29 for 6GB on Touch  with extra-use rates of around 7 cents/MB that run up your bill into the stratosphere. And to think those rates were more expensive….

A lot has been said about the aforementioned campaign, and many are saying there’s no point because, for a lot of Lebanese, they’ve already paid Alfa and Touch by recharging their prepaid line or renewing their internet bundle. But that’s not true, because a one day boycott will cost Alfa and Touch a lot of money.

Food for thought: If those affected by this boycott weren’t worried, they wouldn’t be launching the campaign that they are currently undertaking against it. Also, your personal rights are way more important than any political undertone that has been painted over this campaign.

Please note that with both companies simply enforcing prices set by the government, this boycott affects the government first and foremost. Telecommunication is the second largest revenue source for the government after taxes, which means that reducing that revenue effectively cuts off a major revenue source for the government, which could force it to look into better pricing and services.

In numbers: The 2015 estimated revenues from mobile telecommunication to the Lebanese government were around $1.28 billion, which translates to about $3.5 million daily, encompassing texts and calls as well as internet and other services. That’s a lot of money they’re making for the horrendous services we get. A one day boycott will stop both companies from making approximately that much, without adjusting for further increase in their revenue that they’ve made in 2016.

Those of us whose lines are prepaid will only benefit Touch and Alfa if we use the credit that we already have. Those of us whose lines are postpaid and who decide not to use their phones will directly cost Alfa and Touch money by not providing them with a revenue. If we both put our lines off the grid, those of us who don’t won’t be able to reach us by calling or texting which further degrades the quality of their mobile experience.

With a wide enough boycott, Alfa and Touch will also suffer losses from the fact they have to invest in keeping their networks running without those networks being used: they are supposed to keep their networks at maximum capacity to accommodate the usual influx. With no influx taking place, they will run up the losses.

Perhaps a boycott isn’t the ideal way to bring about the change we want. But the point is not to remain apathetic anymore to the fact we, as a country, are being ripped off without anything to be done about it simply because this is our status quo and we’re forced to deal with it.

Call it slacktivisim, short-sighted, or whatever you feel like. But putting my phone in airplane mode for the day won’t affect me much, but it could get both companies, and therefore our government, to realize that their current rates and policies are unacceptable. Morocco did it when their government banned VoIP. KSA did it when their ISPs raised internet prices. It works.

To put it in perspective, the price of around 250 minutes and 300MB in Lebanon is $84, while the regional average is $32. The price of 500MB and 500 minutes in Lebanon is $136 while the regional average is $57. The price of a 1000minutes and 1000MB bundle in Lebanon is near $270 while the regional average is $111. This is not okay.

As an ending note: if you go France, you can get a phone line from a company called Free for around €20 a month. This includes: unlimited calls inside France to all lines, unlimited calls from France to mobile phones internationally to many countries around the world, Lebanon excluded, unlimited SMS and MMS, unlimited mobile internet, and free wifi when you connect to Free’s Wifi Hotspots on streets. That is all.

6 thoughts on “#سكر_خطك: Why I’m Closing My Alfa & Touch Lines Today

  1. Although resident in the UK, I spend a lot of my time travelling to and within MENA countries on business and whilst not entirely reliant on roaming, tend to use up the capacity I pay my UK service provider pretty much wherever I go. When I am in Lebanon, that roaming data allowance is consumed UBER-fast, requiring me to buy bolt-ons up to 5 times per day. Now that I know why, I shall switch off data roaming when I board my flights to Beirut, use WiFi only and leave it off until I my return flight lands. This isn’t going to change things but it will at least stop me from contributing unwittingly to this overt profiteering by both service providers and the Government.

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  2. I’m always curious how people living in Lebanon can afford to do so. Mobile and home internet connection alone would cost you half the minimum wage monthly. Then there’s all those private school fees, fancy European cars they drive, house maids, a multitude of kids, summer chalets, private tuition, immaculately furnished homes etc…with often only one income earner per household. Where do they get all this money?

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  3. I burned my Alfa pre-payed line after leaving Lebanon.

    mmmayssaaa:

    They get it from Banks, personal loans, car loans, wedding loans, school loans, new born loans…new home furniture loan buy a cat loans dog loans, prestige loan, sahar loans credit cards, lending desks……..

    And they spend the rest of their miserable lives repaying banks, and nagging that they don’t have $.

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  4. I believe a huge differnece lies between lebanon and KSA. One of which is the fact that in KSA tax is not enforced as an extra markup cost like in lebanon thus recharging 30SAR credits costs u 30SAR in lebanon tax is applied before buying the cards meaning the 22$ cars costs up to 40,000 due to tax. This means the government gets its money on the point of sale and not according to the level of consumption.

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