Advertisement
Promo

Network management Toolkit in association with http://ad.doubleclick.net/clk;217618582;14453422;e?http://www.citrix.com/lang/English/lp/lp_1688615.asp

Ex-Oftel chief quits Ofcom early

Graeme Wearden ZDNet.co.uk

Published: 10 Dec 2004 13:00 GMT

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

Ofcom announced on Friday that David Edmonds, the former head of Oftel, was resigning from its board almost a year earlier than planned.

Edmonds departure comes just weeks after Ofcom was highly critical of the state of the UK telecoms market -- which Edmonds was responsible for regulating between 1998 and 2003.

Ofcom said that Edmonds was leaving at his own request early in the New Year, to pursue public- and commercial-sector interests. His three-year term as a non-executive member of the Ofcom board was supposed to run until September 2005.

Lord Currie, chairman of Ofcom, said in a statement that Edmonds had "made a significant contribution to the sector through some of its most formative years."

Edmonds himself said that "it has been a fascinating seven years since I was first appointed to Oftel then subsequently to the board of Ofcom. I now look forward to working in some new areas."

His departure may highlight a clash of cultures in Ofcom, which has taken on the responsibilities of five separate regulators.

"There's a tension in Ofcom between the old guard and the new," said one industry source. "Oftel had a very civil service-like mentality, while Currie and [Stephen] Carter [Ofcom chief executive] have a more visionary approach."

In the second phase of its strategic review of telecommunications, published last month, Ofcom stated that competition in the UK market was "fragile" and announced that a "fresh and coherent approach" to regulation was needed.

This was effectively an admission that Oftel had failed to force BT to give equality of access to its wholesale network, 20 years after the incumbent telco was privatised.

Throughout the last few years of Oftel's existence, many telecoms operators complained that BT was failing to play fair -- with some blaming Edmond's organisation for not being tough enough.

In December 2000, the trade and industry select committee accused Oftel of "appalling complacency" over local-loop unbundling, shortly after the Internet Service Providers Association claimed it was being dictated to by BT.

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendlyPrint with EPSON

Did you find this article useful?
61 out of 102 people found this useful


Full Talkback thread

0 comments

Company/Topic Alerts

Create a new alert from the list below:






Related Citrix Resources

Achieving the lowest server virtualization TCO

Consolidation through server virtualization is a powerful agent for datacenter change, but...

Achieving the lowest server virtualization Total Cost of Ownership

Consolidation through server virtualization is a powerful agent for datacenter change, but...

Citrix XenDesktop: The Best Desktop Delivery System For Today's Demanding Business Needs

Whether you're considering your first virtual desktop solution or trying to salvage an existing...

Desktop Virtualization: A buyer's checklist

Desktop virtualization should do more than just move desktop management to the datacenter—its real...

Five reasons why you need Citrix Essentials for Hyper-V now

This paper explores common challenges associated with server virtualization deployments and the...

See All White Papers

Video icon

Video

On The Road Blog

On the Saving Edge: New Tech in Disast...

By Matthew Cordell A new report commissioned by the UN Foundation and Vodafone Foundation has found the intersection between two incredible trends -- the significant uptick in disasters... More

Post a comment

Tinsel on the TARDIS

There were shepherds on the hill, and the Doctor popped his head out of the TARDIS and said "you might want to see this" and they were astounded. WHY do we pay for a TV licence?... More

Post a comment

Linux is shipped on a third of all net...

A third of netbooks shipped in 2009 came with GNU/Linux rather than Windows preinstalled, according to analysis from ABI Research. The firm's figures strongly contradict Microsoft's... More

Post a comment


Skip Sub Navigation Links to CNET Brand Links

Help

Become part of the ZDNet community.

Newsletters