Union minister of State for Electronics and Telecommunications, Rajeev Chandrasekhar

Summary

Union minister questions Kerala government’s decision to purchase Chinese cables for its K-FON project

NEW DELHI: Raising suspicion and concerns over the newly inaugurated Kerala Fibre Optics Network (K-FON) project by the Kerala government, Union minister of State for Electronics and Telecommunications, Rajeev Chandrasekhar has questioned the government over the use of Chinese-origin optic fibre in the project. The union minister made the remarks while attending a function on ‘9 years of digitisation’ and stated that India has many fibre optic plants and why does the Kerala government require the purchase of optic fibre from China. “They didn’t require importing from China, and this (optical fibre) is a domestically available product. Many plants in India manufacture optical fibre. Why did they need to import from China? What was the pressure? What was the reason?” the Union minister asked. As per reports, the optical fibre used in the K-FON project is imported from China. Hence, it is violating Central government regulations, which mandate importing telecom devices designated as “trusted products” from “trusted sources”. ALSO READ: New IT Rules To Ensure Grievance Against Twitter, FB, YT Is Addressed, Citizens Feel Safe: MoS Chandrasekhar “We are not against any country, nor are we particularly against the source of the product. But there is one framework in the country – a trusted source.

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