Montenegro, Serbia, Bosnia and Macedonia will remove Rwaming, Kosovo bypassed

The Agencys for Electronic Communications of Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia and Macedonia have been sending a draft agreement to competent ministries for the alignment of roaming prices with those in the European Union since 2018. This means that prices will match the internal telephone traffic, which will eventually [...]
The Agencys for Electronic Communications of Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia and Macedonia have been sending a draft agreement to competent ministries for the alignment of roaming prices with those in the European Union since 2018.
This means that prices will match domestic telephone traffic, which will eventually result in the removal of the Romang, Pobeda reports.
The regulators informed the relevant ministries that Bulgaria has already signed an agreement with Macedonia on equalising prices in Rome with domestic traffic and has announced they will seek to do so with other signatories of the 2014 agreement.
Otherwise, with an earlier European Commission decision and with approval from the European Parliament, all mobile operators in the EU from June 15th do not pay their taxpayers the roamgu services.
As a result, all EU operators' taxpayers will be able to use their mobile phones abroad, and do so at the same prices as they agreed with the operator in their country.
European institutions have agreed to limit the price that operators can load each other for services in roaming.
The European Commission has given this question to the telecommunications ministers of Macedonia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia. But neither Albania nor Kosovo are mentioned there.
The process of removing the roamgus in EU countries has lasted ten years and this could last as well as among Balkan countries, recall the initials of this idea and also cite obstacles that could arise from the interests of relevant companies within the Balkan countries.
Communication without roanging also applies to non-EU states, such as Norway, Iceland and Liechtenstein, and these are cited as an example that could be applied even in the case of Balkan countries.












