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30 years on, India's telecom sector still needs a tariff correction
Mobile subscribers in the country are close to 1.2 billion, out of 9.1 billion globally. Internet subscribers in India are pegged at over 970 million
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The Indian telecom story, seen through numbers, could dazzle anyone. But, is it a happy story, 30 years after the first mobile call was made in India in July 1995? First, the numbers.
Mobile subscribers in the country are close to 1.2 billion, out of 9.1 billion globally. Internet subscribers in India are pegged at over 970 million, compared to 5.56 billion around the world. India's broadband subscribers stand at more than 940 million, against the global figure of 5.3 billion.
On the handset side, the stats are equally impressive. From importing 75 per cent of the handsets till not

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Scholars affirmed the role of Kedah Tua (ancient Kedah) and Bujang Valley as one of the main focal points of maritime trade between West Asia – specifically India – and the west coast of the peninsula, from the tip of the Isthmus of Kra down to Bruas. Their presentations confirmed the influence of Hindu-Buddhist religion in Thailand, Cambodia, Indonesia, and Kedah Tua. Kedah Tua was one of the main entrepôt centres in Peninsular Malaysia, connected to other ports in the Southeast Asian region. It had trading links with cultural and economic hubs in the north, such as the Thai coastal cities of Khao Sam Kaeo, Khamaukgi, Lang Suan and the Khiong Thom Complex. In fact, the Orang Laut or sea nomads of Ko Lanta and the islands off southern Thailand in the Andaman Sea – whose ancestral home is believed to be Gunung Jerai – once traded with the Khiong Thom Complex, the southernmost part of the early Thai city-states nearest to Kedah Tua. 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