Kibithu (Anjou district, Arunachal Pradesh):11:30 AM and 2 PM—IST and Beijing times respectively—two time zones flash on the smartphone handset screen as one drives a few hours towards the border settlement of Kibithu, on the northern border with China in Arunachal Pradesh’s Anjou district—much inside Indian territories. Interestingly, the Beijing time—two and a half hours ahead of IST—is shown as the ‘local’ time.
While at Kibithu there is no Indian phone and internet connectivity, about four Chinese telecom networks show 5G availability including China Unicom, a company that was delisted from trading on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) on January 11, 2021, for having significant connections to the Chinese military. Meanwhile, near Kibithu, a message says international roaming is an option that is available even as the IST timing changes over to Beijing time.
As a result, at least two ‘enterprising’ businessmen near Kibithu have subscribed to the Chinese telecom network and offer locals internet use for a certain fee, giving them some semblance of a connection and linkage to the outside world, local officials have told ETV Bharat on condition of anonymity. While top military officials said the erecting of 4G connectivity will be a game-changer and despite huge investment in telecom infrastructure especially in the frontier in China, it is clear that India has still a long way to go and that more investment and effort are required.
While the Indian government has a time-bound plan to develop the telecom infrastructure, it is hampered by lack of roads and other civic infrastructure—because it is only after the roads are properly laid that optical fibre cables (OFCs) can be laid that will facilitate 4G penetration enabling faster data transfers and better telephone connectivity.
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