Gamers are pictured at a cybercafe in Ho Chi Minh City.Tuoi
Tre
Millions of Internet users in Vietnam frustrated by the
snail-paced connection brought about by a snapped submarine cable system will not be recompensed, as the service providers are under no
obligation to cover for incidents caused by force majeure, a leading telecom
said Wednesday.
The cutoff in the AAG (Asia Gateway Pacific)
cable system was an unexpected, unavoidable incident, so no compensation is
required, Bui Quoc Viet, head of the public relations center under VNPT, told Tuoi Tre (Youth)
newspaper.
State-run telecom giant VNPT, fully known as
the Vietnam Posts and Telecommunications Group, is the Internet service
provider that has suffered the most from the cable rupture, which occurred on
January 5 and will not be fully repaired until late next week.
The incident is vexing Internet users in
Vietnam with connectivity getting slow or disrupted whenever they utilize
services hosted overseas, even those as simple as sending emails.
Besides AAG, VNPT also has other land-based
and submarine cable systems with much larger traffic capacity, according to
the media person.
“Shortly after the AAG cable was ruptured,
VNPT directed part of its Internet traffic to other cable systems to ensure
service quality,” Viet said.
Viet added that the state-run telco is
“actively working” with the AAG operator on the repair and the cut would be
fixed in “the next few days.”
The AAG operator said last week that
Internet traffic will return to 100 percent normal on January 23, with
repairs set to begin on Thursday.
Lam Quoc Cuong, director of VNPT
International, said whether customers could be compensated depends on the
terms of service stated in their contracts with the Internet service
providers.
“As agreed upon in the contract, this is a
kind of incident caused by outside factors such as natural disasters rather
than by the service provider, so there is no compensation,” he said.
Ngo Bach Phong, chairman of the Ho Chi Minh
City Customer Protection Association, said even when the Internet service
providers deemed the incident force majeure, they should not ignore the
obvious damage it has inflicted on society.
“However, we do not have any mechanism on
compensation for such an incident,” he said, adding the Vietnam Competition
Authority should take action to protect consumers.
The Internet service providers, meanwhile,
should try to recompense their customers in the event that their services are
disrupted, even when there are no complaints or requests for compensation.
“It’s their responsibility,” he said.
“One suggestion is that the service
providers waive or slash fees for customers during the time
of poor service.”
TUOI TRE
NEWS
|
Thứ Sáu, 16 tháng 1, 2015
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