Text Only
Search

 
350-Year Monopoly Ends for Britain's Royal Mail

01 January 2006

One of Britain's oldest institutions, Royal Mail, has lost its 350-year-old monopoly on letter delivery.

As of Sunday , new regulations enable rival companies to offer mailing services to customers regardless of how many items the customer sends. The national postal services regulator, Postcomm, has so far granted long-term licences to 13 operators. The move means that Royal Mail's distinctive red letter boxes could be joined by rival mail boxes in Britain's streets.

Postcomm chief executive Sarah Chambers says that changing 350 years of history takes time. She said Postcomm is convinced that postal customers will benefit from more reliable, innovative and customer-responsive postal services.

But, unlike its new competitors, Royal Mail will continue to enjoy some historical privileges, including exemption from parking restrictions for delivery vehicles and from the value-added tax.

Some information on this report provided by AP and AFP.

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Top Story
US, China Cooperate on Disease Prevention in Quake Zone  Audio Clip Available

  More Stories
China's President Arrives in Quake Zone as Concern Turns to Survivors  Audio Clip Available
Heavy Rains Lash Burma's Cyclone-Struck Irrawaddy Delta
UN Says 1 Million Burmese Children at Risk After Cyclone  Audio Clip Available
Red Cross Says Clean Water Urgent to Prevent Disease in Burma  Audio Clip Available
Bush in Saudi Arabia for Nuclear Deal  Audio Clip Available
Bin Laden: Al-Qaida Will Continue War Against Israel  Audio Clip Available
Zimbabwe Presidential Runoff Slated For June 27
California Supreme Court Strikes Down Gay Marriage Ban  Audio Clip Available