Telstra buys Pacific Telecoms Company

The Australian government and telecom giant Telstra is buying a Pacific telecoms company in a joint venture…reports Asian Lite News

The move is being viewed as a political block to China’s influence in the region.

Telstra called the $1.6 bn deal a “unique and very attractive commercial opportunity to boost our presence in the region”.

Telstra buys Pacific Telecoms Company

Digicel Pacific employs 1,700 people across Papua New Guinea, Fiji, Samoa, Vanuatu and Tahiti.

The company’s future has been the focus of speculation for months, the report said.

Last year Digicel denied a report that it was in talks to sell its Pacific arm to state-owned China Mobile.

According to Telstra, the Australian government approached it “to provide technical advice in relation to Digicel Pacific” which is “critical to telecommunications in the region”, the report added.

The government then agreed to finance the bulk of the bid, Telstra said.

Analysts say the company would otherwise be attractive to China as it seeks to assert greater authority in the region.

“Digicel is the primary player in the Pacific and Australia sees it as a strategic asset that they can’t allow to fall into the hands of China,” said Jonathan Pryke of the Lowy Institute, a Sydney-based think tank, according to the report.

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“They are keen to get Australian business back into the Pacific and they’ve come to the realisation that they are going to have to underwrite.”

Amid escalating tensions with China, Australia has ramped up its presence in the Pacific, the report said.

This includes allocating $1.5 bn to investment in infrastructure projects in the region as well as joining the Quad group, with the US, India and Japan, and the Aukus security pact, with the US and UK.

It also largely funded a 4,700km (2,900-mile) Coral Sea cable in 2018 to prevent Chinese telecoms company Huawei Technologies from laying it.

Chinese control of telecommunications networks has long been a concern for Washington and its allies.

This has led many countries to ban Huawei and other Chinese companies from supplying phone lines and 5G networks, including the US, UK and Australia.

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