Industry heavyweights, including Bharti Airtel's Gopal Vittal, Vodafone India's Sunil Sood and Himanshu Kapania of Idea Cellular met Sinha as well as Telecom Secretary J S Deepak today.
Cellular operators have accused Trai of adopting "unfair" policies to favour new entrants.
Speaking to reporters after the meeting, the Minister said, "COAI delegation came to meet me and they have expressed some concerns. I told them that Government does not work with bias...Our work is not to stop anyone or allow anyone... For us, consumer is the prime most."
The Minister and the Secretary are also understood to have told the operators that a fight between the players and regulator does not augur well for the sector.
"We understand the point, and going forward this is not the way we would like to resolve it," COAI Director General Rajan S Mathews, who was present at the meeting, said.
The operators are hopeful of meeting the PMO but have clarified that, for now, they do not intend to approach Telecom Disputes Settlement and Appellate Tribunal on the matter.
Mathews pointed out that TRAI's move to review the call connect charges would be detrimental right ahead of the spectrum auctions.
The cellular operators' body has been up in arms over Trai's paper on call connect charges and has questioned the regulator's urgency in initiating the interconnect review, claiming that it "favours new entrants".
"The top 3-4 operators collectively make Rs 8,000 crore from the termination charges on a net basis. All of sudden, if that stream of interconnect revenue goes away, then it brings uncertainity," Mathews said.
RJio struck back saying COAI's charges were "malicious, unfounded, ill-informed, and frivolous and are contrary to actual facts" and was "promoting the vested interests of the incumbent dominant operators".
Mathews today argued that in most cases, operators conduct the tests in their own network without "pushing the load to someone elses' network".
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