Vodafone has agreed a partnership with Iranian internet firm HiWeb to help modernise its network, the companies said on Tuesday, making the British company the latest Western firm to enter Iran after sanctions were lifted.
Vodafone, the world’s second-largest mobile phone company, said the agreement to help modernise HiWEB’s network and IT infrastructure would also benefit its multinational corporate clients when they travel to Iran.
Many European companies have sought to capitalise on the opening up of the region’s second largest economy since U.S. sanctions against were lifted on Jan. 16 after Iran agreed to curtail its atomic energy programme..
“Vodafone’s corporate customers will get the benefit of quality network services in the country and HiWEB will be able to access Vodafone’s global expertise,” Vodafone Partner Markets Chief Executive Diego Massidda said in a statement on Tuesday.
Vodafone’s French rival Orange said at the end of August it was in talks with the Mobile Telecommunication Company of Iran, the country’s largest mobile operator. Privatised in 2009, HiWEB got a nationwide licence to supply mobile internet services (LTE) in 2014 and has won a government contract to provide high-speed internet exclusively to 25,000 villages across the country for a decade.
It is also looking to expand its mobile and fixed services in cities with a focus on business clients. Other British companies entering Iran include British Airways, which resumed direct flights to Tehran in September, and BP which was reported to have bought crude from the National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC) this month.