Business | Telecoms

TRA, RIM in talks on BlackBerry services

UAE telecom authority and BlackBerry maker hope to reach an agreement to prevent suspension of services from October 11

  • By Himendra Mohan Kumar, Staff Reporter
  • Published: 00:00 August 9, 2010
  • Gulf News

Last-ditch efforts
  • Image Credit: Karen Dias/Gulf News
  • BlackBerry services in the UAE are soon to be barred unless the TRA and RIM can reach an agreement.
Image 1 of 5
12345

Dubai: The UAE Telecommunications Regulatory Authority (TRA) remains in talks with Research In Motion (RIM), the maker of the BlackBerry, for compliance with UAE telecommunications regulations, failing which its services will be suspended from October 11 as previously announced, a person familiar with the developments at TRA told Gulf News Sunday.

"RIM has been given enough time to come back with solutions. We are still discussing with RIM the BlackBerry services not complying with the regulations of TRA," said the TRA source.

On August 1, TRA confirmed in a statement that BlackBerry Messenger, BlackBerry Email and BlackBerry web-browsing services in the UAE will be suspended as of October 11.

"The suspension is a result of the failure of ongoing attempts, dating back to 2007, to bring BlackBerry services in the UAE in line with UAE telecommunications regulations," said the TRA.

"The TRA notes that BlackBerry appears to be compliant in similar regulatory environments of other countries, which makes non-compliance in the UAE both disappointing and of great concern," TRA Director General Mohammad Al Ganem was quoted in the statement as saying.

Both telecommunications operators etisalat and du were informed of the decision, TRA said.

All BlackBerry services fall within the UAE regulatory framework developed by the TRA since 2007.

However, because of BlackBerry's technical configuration, some BlackBerry services operate beyond the enforcement of these regulations. BlackBerry data is immediately exported offshore, where it is managed by a foreign, commercial organisation.

The UAE has an estimated 500,000 BlackBerry users.

Comments (1)

  1. Added 14:02 August 9, 2010

    I think I know what is going to happen from now on, RIM will agree to install a locally monitored server where all our data and encryption will be looked at. It's not like we have something to hide but I don't think it's a good idea to have the big brother in that as well. I suggest one thing, in order for du and etisalat not to overuse and abuse their power make the codes available to a security personnel only by court order. Not every police guy, cid, computer assistant teaboy or a traffic officer should have access to private information of half a million people!

    Anonymous, Dubai, United Arab Emirates

Gulf News
Business Editor's choice