BEIJING, July 31 (Xinhuanet) -- Mobile phone
companies that do not allow customers to choose a new European Union plan
limiting the coast of call from abroad risk legal action and fines as of
Tuesday, the European Commission warned Monday.
The new regulations will
provide a price cap on roaming fees later this summer, but phone companies first
had to offer customers the choice of staying with existing fees or shifting to
the new euro-tariff that promises price cuts of up to 70 percent.
"If a customer hasn't received the euro-tariff by
today ... he can go to a national court," EU spokesman Martin Selmayr said.
"All roaming customers in the European Union have to
be given the opportunity by July 30 to opt deliberately for the new
euro-tariff," he said. Companies that fail to offer the option will be "in
breach of the regulation."
National telecom regulators could also impose fines
on companies that have not obeyed the July 30 deadline.
The EU executive plans this week to post on a website
details of which mobile phone companies are in compliance, he said.
The website will explain whether mobile phone firms
have offered a price plan at or below the EU cap of euro0.49 (66 U.S. cents) per
minute for making a call when abroad, and euro0.24 (33 cents) per minute for
receiving one, plus value-added tax.
The EU price ceilings would drop further by 2009 - to
euro0.43 (59 cents) for making calls abroad and euro0.19 (26 cents) for
receiving them. The regulation would then lapse, unless the EU extends it.
(Agencies)