, the largest shareholder of the company was Telecomunicações Públicas de Timor, S.A., which was controlled by Investel Communications, a Brazilian company owned by Timorese businessman, with partners and capital from the Middle East and China. The shareholders of TPT were Investel, the Harii Foundation – Sociedade para o Desenvolvimento de Timor-Leste , and Fundação Oriente. Investel held a further 3.05% of TT via another company, PT Participações SGPS, S.A. The remaining shareholders in TT were the State of Timor-Leste, VDT Holding Limited, a Macau-based company and East Timorese businessman Júlio Alfaro.
History
In September 1999, the telecommunications infrastructure in East Timor was destroyed during the crisis following the East Timorese independence referendum. In 2001, the United Nations Transitional Administration in East Timor launched an international tender for the construction of a replacement telecommunications system. The new network was to be operated according to a concession agreement as a BOT arrangement. In July 2002, the Timor Telecom consortium was awarded the tender. On 17 October 2002, the Timor Telecom consortium was transformed into Timor Telecom, S.A., the first corporation to be formed in the newly independent East Timor. Under the concession agreement, TT was granted a monopoly on telecommunications in East Timor for a term of 15 years. By 1 March 2003, the company had created East Timor's first national telecommunications network, and set up its country code, +670. On that day, the company began operating the network in Dili, Lospalos, Baucau and Oecusse. By the end of 2003, landline, mobile and internet services were available on the network, and the company had opened its first store in Dili. The following year, the company started operating a telecommunications station on Atauro, and opened stores in Baucau and Gleno. In 2005, further stores followed in Maliana, Suai and Pante Macassar. In 2006, independent East Timor's first phone book appeared. The following year, 2007, the first yellow pages were published and voice mail was first offered. By 2008, the company had 125,000 mobile customers. In 2009, it engaged ZTE, a Chinese equipment supplier, to expand its mobile telecommunications system and establish Wideband CDMA. In March 2010, the East Timorese government approved a new telecommunications policy, under which telecommunications would be liberalised. TT's monopoly was to be ended in response to overwhelming public opinion in favour of liberalisation, and in line with developments in the European Union and other countries in the Pacific such as South Korea. In 2012, the government and the company signed an agreement for the early end of the monopoly. On 2 October 2013, Portugal Telecom and Oi, S.A., a Brazilian telecommunications company, announced that they would combine operations to form a new Brazil-based business. In 2015, the merged company's assets in Portugal were sold to Altice to reduce debt; the merged company retained its interests in TT. In June 2016, Oi filed for a 19 billion bankruptcy protection, the largest on record for Brazil. In December 2016, Oi sought approval from a Rio de Janeiro district court to sell its stake in TT to Investec, and in March 2017 the court gave its approval, subject to an assessment that the amount Investec had offered was appropriate. Meanwhile, TT, now operating under the new liberalised telecommunications policy, expanded its range of services and steeply reduced its prices. In 2013, it introduced three new customer plans, completed the renovation of all of its existing stores, and opened a new call centre at. Since then, the company has introduced new technologies, including an improved internet concept and a high speed internet mobile service.
Services and coverage
TT offers landline and mobile voice and internet services, under a variety of plans., the company covered about 94% of East Timor's population with mobile network and internet services, and had about 632,500 customers for those services.