RIM to give India partial BlackBerry access -source

NEW DELHI, (Reuters) – Research In Motion <RIM.TO>  <RIMM.O> has assured India of limited access to BlackBerry  instant messages by Sept. 1, and promised talks this week on  monitoring its more secure corporate email, a government source  said yesterday.

RIM faces an Aug. 31 deadline to give authorities the means  to track and read BlackBerry Enterprise email and its separate  BlackBerry Messenger service.

The government, concerned about the potential for militants  to use the secure BlackBerry network to carry out attacks, has  vowed to shut the services if RIM fails to comply, cutting it  out of one of the world’s fastest-growing telecoms market.

“They have assured partial access to its Messenger services  by September 1 and agreed to provide full access by the end of  the year,” a senior government source, who asked not to be  named, told Reuters.

New Delhi says it will pull the plug on the two key  BlackBerry services if Canada-based RIM does not comply. Some 1  million of RIM’s 41 million customers live in India, where  upcoming 3G network rollout is expected to boost smartphone  growth.

“We hope they will address our security concerns,” an  interior ministry official said.     A spokeswoman for Waterloo, Ontario-based RIM could not be  reached immediately for comment.

India is not the only country pressuring RIM, which built  the BlackBerry’s reputation around confidentiality. That cachet  among corporate and government professionals may be slipping as  the firm accedes to some of those demands.                    RIM shares slipped 4.8 percent in New York and Toronto  trade. It has lost more than 11 percent of its market  capitalisation since August 1, when governments in Saudi Arabia  and the United Arab Emirates said they would also consider a  ban.[ID:nLDE6700AZ]

But some analysts say the fall has been overdone and expect  a bounce as RIM resolves the issue.

“It’s trading at eight times earnings, it’s growing at 30  percent a year. That doesn’t sound logical,” Toronto-based  Scotia Capital analyst Gus Papageorgiou said.

Many business professionals and politicians prefer the  device, but some governments, including Saudi Arabia, fear it  could become a tool for terrorists or those breaking Islamic  laws.

RIM has said security for its BlackBerry Enterprise service  is based on a system where customers create their own key, and  the company has neither a master key or any “back door” to  allow RIM or any third party to gain access to crucial  corporate data.