By C.J. Kuncheria
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India's telecoms ministry does not see any
security risk from Research In Motion's popular BlackBerry e-mail
service and has no plans to shut the service, a top government official
said on Wednesday.
Indian security agencies have said the BlackBerry e-mail device
could be used by militants to send e-mails that could not be traced or
intercepted, and the government wanted RIM to install servers in India
to help monitor traffic.
"There is no threat from BlackBerry services," Telecoms Secretary
Siddhartha Behura told reporters at an industry summit, adding
operators did not need the ministry's approval to offer such services.
"Anybody can start services, that is between the operators and RIM to decide as to start or not," Behura said.
In March, Tata Teleservices (Maharashtra) Ltd said its application
to launch BlackBerry services was rejected by the government because of
the security worries. Telecoms operators, RIM and the government have
since been in talks to resolve the issue.
When asked if the government had any plan to stop the services in the country, Behura said: "Not to my knowledge."
"It's just ... going to mean business as usual," said Nick Agostino,
an analyst at Research Capital in Toronto. "If anything, it just
confirms that the Indian market is now free and open for them and that
one hurdle has been removed."
For RIM, India "is going to be a nice opportunity, but it's a long-term opportunity," he said.
RIM's development of a significant footprint in India will also
likely trail behind the Waterloo, Ontario-based company's progress in
China, he added.
The company's volatile shares rose C$3.99 to 123.68 on the Toronto
Stock Exchange on Wednesday following Tuesday's Canada Day holiday. On
the Nasdaq, they fell $1.50 to $121.77.
A spokesman for RIM in India could not immediately offer a response,
but Indian mobile operators welcomed the secretary's comments.
"We heartily welcome this statement. It is in line with the real
facts," said T.V. Ramachandran, director general of industry body
Cellular Operators Association of India.
Canada-based RIM has 114,000 BlackBerry subscribers in India, the
junior telecoms minister had said in May. The company does not release
country-specific subscribers numbers.
India's three leading mobile firms, Bharti Airtel Ltd, Reliance
Communications Ltd and Vodafone-controlled Vodafone Essar Ltd, and
smaller firm BPL Mobile provide the BlackBerry service in India.
Other firms such as Tata Teleservices and state-run Bharat Sanchar Nigam Limited plan to offer the service to customers.
(Additional reporting by Wojtek Dabrowski in Toronto; Editing by Peter Galloway)
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