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CEPT :European Conference of Postal and Telecommunications Administrations
The European Conference of Postal and Telecommunications Administrations - CEPT - was established in 1959 by 19 countries, which expanded to 26 during its first ten years. Original members were the incumbent monopoly-holding postal and telecommunications administrations. CEPT`s activities included co-operation on commercial, operational, regulatory and technical standardisation issues.

In 1988 CEPT decided to create ETSI, The European Telecommunications Standards Institute, into which all its telecommunication standardisation activities were transferred.

In 1992 the postal and telecommunications operators created their own organisations, Post Europe and ETNO respectively. In conjunction with the European policy of separating postal and telecommunications operations from policy-making and regulatory functions, CEPT thus became a body of policy-makers and regulators. At the same time, Central and Eastern European Countries became eligible for membership of CEPT. With its 45 members CEPT now covers almost the entire geographical area of Europe.

The role and purpose of CEPT was redefined at its plenary assembly on 5-6 September 1995 in Weimar as follows:

CEPT offers its members the chance of:

Establishing a European forum for discussions on sovereign and regulatory issues in the field of post and telecommunications issues;
Providing mutual assistance among members with regard to the settlement of sovereign/regulatory issues;
Exerting an influence on the goals and priorities in the field of European Post and Telecommunications through common positions;
Shaping, in the field of European posts and telecoms, those areas coming under its responsibilities;
Carrying out its activities at a pan- European level;
Strengthening and fostering more intensively co-operation with Eastern and Central European countries;
Promoting and facilitating relations between European regulators (e.g. through personal contacts);
Influencing, through common positions, developments within ITU and UPU in accordance with European goals;
Responding to new circumstances in a non-bureaucratic and cost-effective way and carrying out its activities in the time allocated;
Settling common problems at committee level, through close collaboration between its committees;
Giving its activities more binding force, if required, than in the past; creating a single Europe on posts and telecommunications sectors.
http://www.cept.org/
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