The Indian offshoot of Britain's Vodafone on Friday completed a merger with Idea Cellular to become the country's biggest mobile phone company with more than 400 million customers.
The new $23bn Vodafone Idea giant deposes Bharti Airtel -- with its 350 million subscribers -- as India's top mobile firm.
Approval by the National Company Law Tribunal allowed the two companies to finalise their merger.
"Following clearance of the transaction by the relevant competition and regulatory authorities, Vodafone Group Plc announces the completion of the merger between Vodafone India Ltd and Idea Cellular Ltd," the company said in a statement. 
The two companies generated around 7.1bn euros ($8.2bn) in revenues in the year to June 2018, it said.
Vodafone and Idea flagged the tie-up in March 2017 and the deal is expected to further shake up India's giant telecom industry.
India is expected to generate telecom service revenue of more than $50bn by 2020, according to Market Research Store.
The sector was jolted in 2016 when Asia's richest man Mukesh Ambani launched Jio with market-defying tariffs for consumers. 
Jio's arrival sparked a rush to market consolidation as competitors tried to match the resources of a firm backed by Ambani's energy-to-chemicals conglomerate Reliance Industries. 
Jio, now the third biggest operator, announced a profit of 5.10bn rupees ($76.43mn) for the quarter ended March 31, up from 5.04bn rupees reported in the previous quarter. 
Observers expect further tariff wars in India's ever expanding telecom sector. 
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