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PTA figures for 2007, for comparison, reported 48.5 million subscribers, [6] rising to 102 million (over 60% of the population) by December 2010. [7]In 2007, the largest cellular mobile telephone service providing company in Pakistan was Mobilink, and other companies included Wateen (a member of Dhabi Group).
With 194 million mobile subscribers in June 2022, Pakistan has the highest mobile penetration rate in the South Asian region. 3G/4G subscribers stood at 115 million in June 2022. According to the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA), Jazz leads the market with 75.00 million subscribers, followed by Telenor with 49.19 million, Zong with 44 ...
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Mobile Broadband Postpaid & Prepaid Mobile Banking (S-Paisa) Government of Pakistan, Ministry of Information Technology and Telecommunication. 1.95 million Mobile virtual network operators (MVNO) 6 Onic 410 / 03 0339x 2G: 900 MHz (GPRS, EDGE) 3G: 900 MHz (UMTS, HSPA+) 4G: 1800 (B3) / 2100 (B1) MHz (LTE/LTE-A) Roams on SCO: Mobile Broadband VoLTE
QMobile was launched in 2009. Its mobile phones were known for their low- and mid-ranged price range and were assembled with imported parts from China. [7] [8] [9] QMobile’s range of devices includes, some tablets and dozens of phones including touchscreen, QWERTY, and WiFi, all running Android OS. A windows phone named QMobile W1 was also ...
In December 2023, Telenor ASA decided to sell its subsidiary, Telenor Pakistan, to PTCL for $385 million. [4] As of August 2024, Telenor Pakistan has a total subscriber base of 44 million in Pakistan, among which 25 million are 4G/LTE subscribers. With a market share of 23%, it is currently the third largest mobile phone network in Pakistan. [5]
Jazz has over 14,000 active cell sites in the country, [10] with over 25,000 kilometers of fiber-optic cables laid. Huawei, Nokia-Siemens, and ZTE are the primary vendors for networking equipment at Jazz, including Radio Base Stations, microwave equipment and network switches.
The influx of US military and economic aid amounting to US$500 million during 1955–58 contributed to Pakistan's growth reliant on foreign aid. In 1959, after a military coup d'état in 1958 , the martial law regime introduced export bonus vouchers as import licenses and exempted certain goods from licensing.