Awcc Launches Wa Wa Top Sim: New Plan Provides Best Speed, Benefits and Value to Subscribers

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Awcc Launches Wa Wa Top Sim: New Plan Provides Best Speed, Benefits and Value to Subscribers This page was exported from - Afghan Wireless Export date: Sun Oct 3 4:35:35 2021 / +0000 GMT AWCC LAUNCHES WA WA TOP SIM: NEW PLAN PROVIDES BEST SPEED, BENEFITS AND VALUE TO SUBSCRIBERS Kabul, Afghanistan?February 5, 2020?Demonstrating its unmatched leadership in providing Afghans with innovative communications services, Afghan Wireless Communication Company (AWCC) (www.afghan-wireless.com), Afghanistan's leading provider of 4G LTE, HD Voice, Data, Entertainment and Mobile Payment services to over 5,000,000 consumers and businesses, announced the launch of AWCC Wa Wa Top Sim?the nation's first and most affordable data and voice communications plan. Wa Wa Top Sim addresses the exponentially growing demand from AWCC subscribers for robust, scalable and competitively priced wireless broadband services. Wa Wa Top Sim's solutions are especially appealing to a rising, globally engaged generation of Afghan youth?a group who live their lives as digital citizens, and utilize large amounts of data to communicate via social media, conduct e-transactions and connect with friends and family, here in Afghanistan and throughout the world. Incorporating Afghanistan's fastest 4.75G communications network and the most subscriber benefits available from any communications plan, subscribers enrolling in AWCC's Wa Wa Top Sim plan will receive an exciting and unmatched set of rewards, including: The Best Call Rate To All Operators: The most affordable call rates available for voice calls made on AWCC's communications network and other networks. With Wa Wa Top Sim, AWCC subscribers can make calls using AWCC's network and other networks, starting at 3 POL per second. Top Sim Per Second Billing Pulse: Wa Wa Top Sim's to the second charge accuracy?the best in the industry?means that subscribers will pay only for the airtime they use. Data bonuses of up to 6.25 GB each time a subscriber tops up their wireless account. ?AWCC's Wa Wa Top Sim plan demonstrates once again that Afghan Wireless leads our industry in providing communications solutions that give all Afghans the ability to connect and communicate with the world,? said Dr. Ehsanollah Bayat, the Founder of Afghan Wireless and the Chairman of The Bayat Group. ?AWCC is committed to our culture of intensive innovation, so that we can provide our country with the most advanced communications capabilities, not just for the present, but for all the years to come.? About Afghan Wireless: The Afghan Wireless Communication Company (AWCC) (www.afghan-wireless.com), is Afghanistan's first wireless communications company and the founder of Afghanistan's wireless communications market. AWCC provides 4G LTE, 3.75G+, 3G, 2.5G, Voice, Data, Internet and Mobile Payment Services to more than five million Business and Consumer Clients, located in all of Afghanistan's thirty-four provinces. The Company has global partnerships with 425 wireless carrier networks in 125 countries. AWCC was founded in 2002 by Mr. Ehsan Bayat, Chairman of The Bayat Group (www.bayat-group.com). Mr. Bayat is the recipient of the 2018 award for Best Media and Telecom CEO from International Finance Magazine. Output as PDF file has been powered by [ Universal Post Manager ] plugin from www.ProfProjects.com | Page 1/1 |.
Recommended publications
  • Afghanistan: Background and U.S. Policy
    Afghanistan: Background and U.S. Policy July 18, 2019 Congressional Research Service https://crsreports.congress.gov R45818 SUMMARY R45818 Afghanistan: Background and U.S. Policy July 18, 2019 Afghanistan has been a significant U.S. foreign policy concern since 2001, when the United States, in response to the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, led a military Clayton Thomas campaign against Al Qaeda and the Taliban government that harbored and supported it. Analyst in Middle Eastern In the intervening 18 years, the United States has suffered approximately 2,400 military Affairs fatalities in Afghanistan, with the cost of military operations reaching nearly $750 billion. Congress has appropriated approximately $133 billion for reconstruction. In that time, an elected Afghan government has replaced the Taliban, and most measures of human development have improved, although Afghanistan’s future prospects remain mixed in light of the country’s ongoing violent conflict and political contention. Topics covered in this report include: Security dynamics. U.S. and Afghan forces, along with international partners, combat a Taliban insurgency that is, by many measures, in a stronger military position now than at any point since 2001. Many observers assess that a full-scale U.S. withdrawal would lead to the collapse of the Afghan government and perhaps even the reestablishment of Taliban control over most of the country. Taliban insurgents operate alongside, and in periodic competition with, an array of other armed groups, including regional affiliates of Al Qaeda (a longtime Taliban ally) and the Islamic State (a Taliban foe and increasing focus of U.S. policy). U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • IT in Afghanistan
    ICT in Afghanistan (two-way communication only) Siri Birgitte Uldal Muhammad Aimal Marjan 4. February 2004 Title NST report ICT in Afghanistan (Two way communication only) ISBN Number of pages Date Authors Siri Birgitte Uldal, NST Muhammad Aimal Marjan, Ministry of Communcation / Afghan Computer Science Association Summary Two years after Taliban left Kabul, there is about 172 000 telephones in Afghanistan in a country of assumed 25 mill inhabitants. The MoC has set up a three tier model for phone coverage, where the finishing of tier one and the start of tier two are under implementation. Today Kabul, Herat, Mazar-i-Sharif, Kandahar, Jalalabad, Kunduz has some access to phones, but not enough to supply the demand. Today there are concrete plans for extension to Khost, Pulekhomri, Sheberghan, Ghazni, Faizabad, Lashkergha, Taloqan, Parwan and Baglas. Beside the MoCs terrestrial network, two GSM vendors (AWCC and Roshan) have license to operate. The GoA has a radio network that reaches out to all provinces. 10 ISPs are registered. The .af domain was revitalized about a year ago, now 138 domains are registered under .af. Public Internet cafes exists in Kabul (est. 50), Mazar-i-Sharif (est. 10), Kandahar (est. 10) and Herat (est. 10), but NGOs has set up VSATs also in other cities. The MoC has plans for a fiber ring, but while the fiber ring may take some time, VSAT technology are utilized. Kabul University is likely offering the best higher education in the country. Here bachelor degrees in Computer Science are offered. Cisco has established a training centre in the same building offering a two year education in networking.
    [Show full text]
  • Mission Accomplished: the Bayat
    This page was exported from - Afghan Wireless Export date: Sat Sep 25 14:01:07 2021 / +0000 GMT MISSION ACCOMPLISHED: THE BAYAT FOUNDATION, THE STARKEY HEARING FOUNDATION, VOLUNTEERS FROM AFGHAN WIRELESS AND THE BAYAT GROUP PROVIDE HEARING AND HOPE TO ALMOST 1,000 AFGHANS August 28th-August 29th Hearing Care Mission In Afghanistan Fulfills Objective of Providing Afghans From Kabul and Throughout The Country With Vital Hearing Restoration and Hearing Care Services Kabul, Afghanistan?September 6, 2016?Fulfilling their pledge to enrich the lives of the Afghan people with the three precious gifts of Hearing, Healing and Hope, The Bayat Foundation (www.bayatfoundation.org), Afghanistan's largest, private, non-profit Health, Education and Social Development Organization, and The Starkey Hearing Foundation ( www.starkeyhearingfoundation.org), announced the successful conclusion of their third annual joint Bayat-Starkey Afghanistan Hearing Care Mission. The Bayat-Starkey Hearing Care Mission, held in Kabul from August 28th and August 29th, provided free auditory and hearing restoration care to approximately 1,000 Afghan citizens, who hailed from every region of the country. Each Bayat-Starkey Hearing Care Team was composed of an international assembly of professional Audiologists who donated their services, working with The Starkey Hearing Foundation's renown team of hearing care specialists, as well as scores of highly trained and dedicated volunteers from The Bayat Foundation and all divisions of The Bayat Group of Companies, including Afghan Wireless and the Ariana Television Network. Dr. Ehsanollah Bayat and Mrs. Fatema Bayat spearheaded The Bayat Group and The Bayat Foundation's efforts for the Bayat-Starkey Hearing Care Mission, illustrating their profound and personal commitment to the success of the mission, and their determination to improve the lives of their fellow Afghans.
    [Show full text]
  • Afghanistan's
    Siri Birgitte Uldal and International Perspectives Muhammad Aimal Marjan Computing in Post-War Afghanistan Reflecting on recent history and the context of current events. fghanistan’s history can be structure. On Oct. 9, 2004, TELECOMMUNICATIONS A traced back over 5,000 years. Hamid Karzai was elected presi- Siemens installed Afghanistan’s Many of its cities thrived as dent and in December 2004, first telephone network in 1957 trading centers on the ancient Silk Amirzai Sangin took up the posi- in Kabul with a capacity of 5,000 Road. In the mid-1960s, King tion as the Minister of Commu- lines.2 During the Taliban regime Zahir Shah started Afghanistan on nications. in 1998, the CIA estimated there the road toward democracy with Afghanistan has a population were 29,000 functioning tele- nascent free elections, a parlia- of 29.9 million, with 47% less phone lines for a country about ment, civil rights, and emancipa- than 15 years old. An estimated tion for women [8]. The King was 80% works in agriculture. The 2Ironically, what may have been the world’s first mil- itary use of the telephone in a war zone occurred on ousted in a coup in 1973, which literacy rate is 36%, which breaks the northwest frontier of the British Raj during the was followed by other largely pro- down into 51% of men and 21% campaign against the Jowaki tribe, 1877–78, near 1 what is now the Afghanistan-Pakistan border. This Soviet coups. In 1979, the Soviet of women. The per capita GDP use of the telephone occurred within a year or two of Union invaded Afghanistan but in purchasing power parity is its invention [5].
    [Show full text]
  • Afghanistan Review Week 12 20 March 2012 Comprehensive Information on Complex Crises
    CIVIL - MILITARY FUSION CENT RE Afghanistan Review Week 12 20 March 2012 Comprehensive Information on Complex Crises This document provides a weekly overview of developments in Afghanistan from 13 – 19 March 2012, INSIDE THIS ISSUE with hyper-links to source material highlighted in blue and underlined in the text. For more information Economic Development on the topics below or other issues pertaining to events in Afghanistan, contact the members of the Afghanistan Team, or visit our website at www.cimicweb.org. Governance & Rule of Law Security & Force Protection Economic Development Steven A. Zyck ► [email protected] Social & Strategic Infrastructure ccording to The Hindu, India is looking to launch a proposed Partnership Council with DISCLAIMER Afghanistan in order to deepen economic ties between the two countries following the A establishment of a bilateral cooperation agreement late last year. The Partnership Coun- The Civil-Military Fusion Centre cil, which will be chaired by both countries’ foreign ministers, will promote cooperation be- (CFC) is an information and tween Afghanistan and India in areas such as capacity building in the security, education and knowledge management organisa- civil society sectors and mining. India won the rights to the Hajigak iron ore deposit in central tion focused on improving civil- Afghanistan last year and is currently planning to pursue oil and gas deposits in the North of military interaction, facilitating the country as well as a number of copper deposits. information sharing and enhancing situational awareness through the Pakistan Observer says the Board of Directors of the Pakistan-Afghanistan Joint Chamber of CimicWeb portal and our weekly Commerce and Industry met for the first time between 12 and 16 March in Karachi.
    [Show full text]
  • Afghan Wireless and Ariana Television Network Score Again with Broadcast Rights for English Premiere League Football
    This page was exported from - Afghan Wireless Export date: Sat Sep 25 17:48:14 2021 / +0000 GMT AFGHAN WIRELESS AND ARIANA TELEVISION NETWORK SCORE AGAIN WITH BROADCAST RIGHTS FOR ENGLISH PREMIERE LEAGUE FOOTBALL Afghan Wireless and Ariana TV Selected By The English Premiere League As Afghanistan's Exclusive Broadcaster of EPL Games Kabul, Afghanistan?October 7, 2016?Ariana Television Network (ATN) (www.arianatelevision.com), Afghanistan's premier broadcaster of award-winning television and radio programming to 25,000,000 Afghans, and Afghan Wireless Communication Company (AWCC) (www.afghan-wireless.com), the nation's first mobile communications company, and the leader of Afghanistan's mobile communications market, announced today that a joint partnership between the companies had successfully secured the broadcast, streaming and distribution rights, in Afghanistan, for English Premiere League Football. AWCC and ATN inaugurated their media partnership with the English Premiere League on September 8, 2016, and the first match broadcast on ATN, Burnley vs. Manchester United, was televised on September 10th .The complete broadcast schedule of English Premiere League matches that will be available from ATN and AWCC can be accessed at http://afghan-wireless.com/about-us/epl-schedule/ Together, AWCC and ATN are celebrating the arrival of EPL Football in Afghanistan, with a robust and exciting program of telecasts of EPL Matches, complemented with video streaming, live commentary, panel discussions, SMS updates and other interactive services. ?AWCC and ATN's joint promotion and distribution of English Premiere League Football contests?which can be seen and accessed throughout Afghanistan?represents an impressive and unmatched level of cooperation and technological innovation,? said Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • An In-Depth Study on the Broadband Infrastructure in Afghanistan and Mongolia
    An In-Depth Study on the Broadband Infrastructure in Afghanistan and Mongolia The secretariat of the Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP) is the regional development arm of the United Nations and serves as the main economic and social development centre for the United Nations in Asia and the Pacific. Its mandate is to foster cooperation among its 53 members and 9 associate members. It provides the strategic link between global and country-level programmes and issues. It supports Governments of countries in the region in consolidating regional positions and advocates regional approaches to meeting the region’s unique socioeconomic challenges in a globalizing world. The ESCAP secretariat is in Bangkok. Please visit the ESCAP website at http://www.unescap.org for further information. The shaded areas of the map indicate ESCAP members and associate members. An In-Depth Study on the Broadband Infrastructure in Afghanistan and Mongolia © United Nations, 2016 This study has been prepared for ESCAP by Michael Ruddy and Esra Ozdemir, Terabit Consulting. The views expressed herein are those of the authors, and do not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations. The information contained is based primarily on interviews, published and unpublished data, and presentations by members of the industry. The designations employed and material presented do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the Secretariat of the United Nations concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area, or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. References and maps obtained from external sources might not conform to the United Nations editorial guidelines.
    [Show full text]
  • Views Were Conducted During Fieldwork in the Summers of 2008 And
    The Role of Media in the Framing of the Afghan Conflict and the Search for Peace A dissertation presented to the faculty of the Scripps College of Communication of Ohio University In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy Roshan Noorzai August 2012 © 2012 Roshan Noorzai. All Rights Reserved. This dissertation titled The Role of Media in the Framing of the Afghan Conflict and the Search for Peace by ROSHAN NOORZAI has been approved for the School of Media Arts and Studies and the Scripps College of Communication by _____________________________________________ Don M. Flournoy Professor of Media Arts and Studies _____________________________________________ Scott Titsworth Dean, Scripps College of Communication ii Abstract NOORZAI, ROSHAN, Ph.D., August 2012, Mass Communication The Role of Media in the Framing of the Afghan Conflict and the Search for Peace (306 pp.) Director of Dissertation: Don M. Flournoy This dissertation explores media framing of conflict and peace in post-September 11, 2001 Afghanistan. The media selected for this study included: the BBC Pashto Service and Azadi Radio at the international level; Tehran’s Pashto Radio at the regional level; National Radio and Television of Afghanistan [NRTA], Tolo Television and Ariana Television at the national level; and Salam Watandar Network and Hewad Television at the local level. In-depth interviews were conducted during fieldwork in the summers of 2008 and 2009. Participant observation, textual analysis and documents analysis were the other methods used in this study. Using comparative frame analysis, this study identified the following main frames: state building, occupation as failure and civilian victims.
    [Show full text]
  • SMS Coverage
    7/26/2018 Centro De Mensajes :: Send Single SMS SMS Coverage Covering 651 Operators in 228 Countries. Country Operator Cost Comments Afghan Wireless Communication Company 0.0108 Dynamic Alphanumeric (AWCC) Afghanistan (+93) Roshan 0.0105 Alpha Sender Only Afghanistan (+93) MTN Afghanistan 0.0077 Senders are being Replaced Afghanistan (+93) Etisalat Afghanistan 0.0286 Dynamic Alphanumeric Afghanistan (+93) Salaam Afghan Telecom 0.0101 Dynamic Alphanumeric Afghanistan (+93) Albania Telekom Albania 0.0108 Dynamic Alphanumeric (+355) Albania Vodafone Albania 0.0116 Dynamic Alphanumeric (+355) Albania Eagle Mobile 0.0093 Dynamic Alphanumeric (+355) Algeria Algerie Telecom (Mobilis) 0.0178 Dynamic Alphanumeric (+213) Algeria Orascom Telecom (Djezzy) 0.0101 Dynamic Alphanumeric (+213) Algeria Ooredoo Algeria 0.0155 Dynamic Alphanumeric (+213) American Blue Sky Communications 0.0657 Dynamic Alphanumeric Samoa (+1684) Andorra Andorra Telecom (Servei De Tele. DAndorra) 0.0077 Dynamic Alphanumeric (+376) Angola Unitel Angola 0.0101 Dynamic Alphanumeric (+244) Angola Movicel Angola 0.0139 Dynamic Alphanumeric (+244) Anguilla Weblinks 0.0302 Dynamic Alphanumeric (+1264) Anguilla Wireless Ventures Anguilla (Digicel) 0.0302 Dynamic Alphanumeric (+1264) Anguilla Cable & Wireless Anguilla 0.0131 Dynamic Alphanumeric (+1264) Antigua and APUA PCS 0.0232 Dynamic Alphanumeric Barbuda (+1268) Antigua and FLOW Antigua (LIME - CWC) 0.0302 Dynamic Alphanumeric Barbuda (+1268) Antigua and Digicel Antigua 0.0099 Dynamic Alphanumeric Barbuda (+1268) Argentina Nextel
    [Show full text]
  • Afghan Wireless Expands 4.75G+ Lte Service to Jalalabad, Khost, Maimana and Takhar Regions
    This page was exported from - Afghan Wireless Export date: Thu Sep 23 11:19:18 2021 / +0000 GMT AFGHAN WIRELESS EXPANDS 4.75G+ LTE SERVICE TO JALALABAD, KHOST, MAIMANA AND TAKHAR REGIONS Afghanistan's Most Advanced 4G LTE Network Continues Strong and Successful Growth Kabul, Afghanistan?August 6, 2019?Afghan Wireless Communication Company (AWCC) (afghan-wireless.com), Afghanistan's first mobile communications company and the nation's largest provider of 4G LTE communications services, announced today that the Company's 4.75G+ LTE service?Afghanistan's fastest and most advanced 4G LTE Network?is now available to subscribers in the following cities: - Jalalabad - Khost - Maimana - Takhar The continued expansion of AWCC's 4.75G+ LTE solution to Afghanistan's leading cities highlights AWCC's undisputed position as the nation's foremost provider of advanced and innovative communications services. AWCC's 4.75G+ LTE Network service provides commercial and consumer subscribers with the fastest data upload and download speeds available in Afghanistan today. Since AWCC launched Afghanistan's first and largest 4G LTE network in May 2017, intensive and growing demand from subscribers for advanced and reliable high-speed communications solutions has supported the aggressive growth of AWCC's 4G LTE service area. ?Expanding our 4.75G+ LTE network to Jalalabad, Khost, Maimana and Takhar is the latest example of AWCC's commitment to provide Afghans with the nation's most innovative and reliable communications services,? said Mr. Amin Ramin, the Managing Director of Afghan Wireless. ?From our ultra-fast 4.75G+ LTE network, to MyMoney mobile payments and other solutions, Afghan Wireless provides people and businesses with the technologies which help them connect?and make vital contributions to our country's economic development and progress.? About Afghan Wireless: The Afghan Wireless Communication Company (AWCC) (www.afghan-wireless.com) is Afghanistan's first wireless communications company and the founder of Afghanistan's wireless communications market.
    [Show full text]
  • Afghanistan: Post-Taliban Governance, Security, and U.S
    Afghanistan: Post-Taliban Governance, Security, and U.S. Policy Kenneth Katzman Specialist in Middle Eastern Affairs July 20, 2009 Congressional Research Service 7-5700 www.crs.gov RL30588 CRS Report for Congress Prepared for Members and Committees of Congress Afghanistan: Post-Taliban Governance, Security, and U.S. Policy Summary Upon taking office, the Obama Administration faced a deteriorating security environment in Afghanistan, including an expanding militant presence in some areas, increasing numbers of civilian and military deaths, Afghan and international disillusionment with corruption in the government of Afghan President Hamid Karzai, and the infiltration of Taliban militants from safe havens in Pakistan. The Obama Administration conducted a “strategic review,” the results of which were announced on March 27, 2009, in advance of an April 3-4, 2009, NATO summit. This review built upon assessments completed in the latter days of the Bush Administration, which produced decisions to plan a build-up of U.S. forces in Afghanistan. In part because of the many different causes of instability in Afghanistan, there reportedly were differences within the Obama Administration on a new strategy. The review apparently leaned toward those in the Administration who believe that adding combat troops is less crucial than building governance, although 21,000 U.S. troops are being added during May - September 2009. The new strategy emphasizes non-military steps such as increasing the resources devoted to economic development, building Afghan governance primarily at the local level, reforming the Afghan government, expanding and reforming the Afghan security forces, and trying to improve Pakistan’s efforts to curb militant activity on its soil.
    [Show full text]
  • Afghan News June 2004 News Cont'd Next Month in Kabul Will Be Em- Fice in Maimana, Capital of Rights Commission, the Meeting Ployed by the Kabul Municipali- Faryab
    Latest News Cont'd Afghan News June 2004 News Cont'd next month in Kabul will be em- fice in Maimana, capital of Rights Commission, the meeting ployed by the Kabul Municipali- Faryab. distributed required forms and E n ty in the sanitation, parks and qualification conditions and se- m a t works sector. According to the (May 14) - First major music lected 10 eligible women as can- b s a i UNAMA representative, the em- concert took place at the Kabul didates. ss an y of Afgh ployees will be paid a little over stadium packed with 30,000 $4 for a day's labor. spectators and fans of famous Af- (May 5) - In partnership with Eu- in Tokyo -A 5th-6th C. A.D. historic site ghan singer Farhad Darya. ropean IMG Bank, the Afghani- was discovered in Kabul prompt- stan International Bank began its ing Afghan Culture and Informa- (May 13) - Rennovation of Kabul operation in Kabul. The initiative tion Minister Makhdoom Raheen International Airport is now un- was launched by three Afghan We're on the web to lead a delegation to the once derway. NATO, the International businessmen and the ADB. buried cave on Khawja Safa Civil Aviation Organization, the -Kabul University's Department www.afghanembassyjp.com mountain. World Bank and the US will re- of Journalism launched its pilot -Religious Scholars from across pave the runway, install new radio broadcast, daily from noon Afghanistan met with President communications and meteorolog- to 2 pm on FM radio. Hamid Karzai in the Presidential ical equipment. Palace and declared their support (May 3) - President Karzai wel- for the general elections and the (May 11) - Afghan Wireless Co.
    [Show full text]