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Continued delays with the licensing of 3G spectrum to Algeria’s mobile network operators is holding back full competition in the country’s Internet and broadband sector.
Defined as a lower middle-income country by the World Bank, Macedonia possesses a services dominated economy, which represents approximately 60% of GDP.
Tanzania’s economy has been showing solid growth rates of between 5% and 8% every year since 2000.
The aftermath of the 1994 genocide and a monopolistic market structure until 2006 have weighed on the Rwandan telecommunications sector, but the country is now rapidly catching up with other markets i
Algeria is one of the most penetrated mobile and fixed-line markets in Africa.
Uzbekistan has been struggling to bring its telecommunications system up to the standard found in developed countries.
Turkmenistan’s telecommunications services are considered to be the least developed of all the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) countries.
A number of factors had been slowing the development of Nepal’s telecom network. The country’s topography has made it extremely difficult to develop its telecommunications infrastructure.
One of the newest Eastern European countries, Montenegro has struck out on its own since gaining independence from Serbia and Montenegro in 2006, a task made easier by the fact that it possessed a sep
As Georgia worked to rebuild both its economy and its society after the collapse of the Soviet Union, the appalling state of its telecommunications infrastructure hindered the rebuilding process.
Bosnia-Herzegovina has made marked economic development since emerging from war, elevating the country to middle-income status as defined by the World Bank.
In less than 6 years Bhutan has moved from having no mobile phones to claiming in excess of 50% mobile penetration. In 2008 the annual growth in mobile subscribers was close to 100%.
Coming into 2009 there were around 6 million mobile subscribers (70% penetration) in Azerbaijan, with Azercell continuing to command a majority share of the market (almost 60%), but this dominance was
With the most damaging effects of the Global Financial Crisis hitting Armenia in 2009, demand for telecom services in the country plummeted.
Since the fall of the Miloševic regime in 2000 Serbia has focused on rebuilding its economy and its relations with Europe.