CABELTEL INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION
                        1755 Wittington Place, Suite 340
                               Dallas, Texas 75234

                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
                           To Be Held December 1, 2006





Notice is hereby  given that the Annual  Meeting of  stockholders  (the  "Annual
Meeting")  of  CabelTel  International  Corporation  (the  "Company"),  a Nevada
corporation,  will be held at 10:00 AM,  local time on  December 1, 2006 at Four
Hickory Centre,  1755 Wittington Place, Suite 340, Dallas, TX 75234, to consider
and vote upon the following matters:

     1)   Election of five directors.
     2)   The  ratification of the selection of Farmer,  Fuqua & Huff, PC as the
          independent registered public accounting firm.
     3)   Such other matters as may properly be presented at the Annual Meeting.

Only  stockholders  of record at the close of  business  on October 19, 2006 may
vote at the meeting.  The forgoing items of business are more fully described in
the Proxy Statement accompanying this notice.

Even if you plan to attend the meeting,  you are still  requested to sign,  date
and return the accompanying  proxy in the enclosed  addressed  envelope.  If you
attend,  you may vote in  person  if you wish,  even  though  you have sent your
proxy.

                                              By Order of the Board of Directors

                                              /s/ Oscar Smith

                                              Oscar Smith, Secretary

                                              October 19, 2006



                       CABELTEL INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION
                        1755 Wittington Place, Suite 340
                               Dallas, Texas 75234
                                  (972)407-8400

                                 PROXY STATEMENT
                                       FOR
                         ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
                           To Be Held December 1, 2006


CabelTel  International  Corporation  is sending  this proxy  statement  and the
accompanying  proxy card to the  holders of common  stock and Series B Preferred
Stock in connection  with a solicitation of proxies by the board of directors of
the Company from the  stockholders for use at the annual meeting of stockholders
of the Company.  We are mailing this proxy  statement  and the enclosed  form of
proxy beginning on or about November 1, 2006.


                          VOTING AND PROXY INFORMATION
Who May Vote

Holders of record of common  stock and Series B Preferred  Stock at the close of
business on October 19,  2006 are  entitled to receive  notice of and to vote at
the annual  meeting.  At the close of  business  on the  record  date there were
outstanding  986,954 shares of common stock and 615 shares of Series B preferred
Stock,  the only  outstanding  securities of the Company entitled to vote at the
annual meeting.  The common stock is held by  approximately  450 stockholders of
record. The Series B Preferred Stock is held by six stockholders of record.

Required Votes

Each common  stockholder  and Series B Preferred  stockholder is entitled to one
vote per share  and.  Such  votes  may be cast in person or by proxy.  Under the
rules of the American Stock Exchange,  brokers holding shares for customers have
authority to vote on certain  matters  when they have not received  instructions
from the  beneficial  owners and do not have such  authority as to certain other
matters.  The  Exchange  rules allow member firms of the Exchange to vote on the
Proposal without specific instructions from beneficial owners.

The  directors  will be elected by a plurality of the votes cast in person or by
proxy.  Therefore,  in the election of directors  stockholders  may vote for the
nominees or withhold authority of the proxy to vote for the nominees.

How to Vote

Votes may be cast in person at the annual meeting or by proxy using the enclosed
proxy card.  A  facsimile  of the proxy will be  accepted.  All shares of common
stock and preferred stock that are represented at the annual meeting by properly
executed  proxies  received by the Company prior to or at the annual meeting and
not  revoked  will be  voted  at the  annual  meeting  in  accordance  with  the
instructions indicated in their proxies. Unless instructions to the contrary are
specified  in the proxy,  each such proxy  will be voted FOR the  election  as a
director of the nominees listed herein.

Signed Proxies Can Be Revoked

Any proxy  given  pursuant  to this  solicitation  may be  revoked by the person
giving it at any time before it is voted.  Proxies may be revoked by filing with
the Secretary of the Company,  before the vote is taken at the annual meeting, a
written  notice of  revocation  bearing a date later than the date of the proxy,
duly executing and delivering a subsequent  proxy relating to the same shares or
attending the annual  meeting and voting in person  (although  attendance at the
annual  meeting will not in and of itself  constitute a revocation  of a proxy).
Any  written  notice  of  revocation  should  be sent to:  Corporate  Secretary,
CabelTel  International  Corporation,  1755 Wittington Place, Suite 340, Dallas,
Texas 75234.



                                       1


Expenses of Solicitation

The Company will bear the expense of this solicitation, including the reasonable
costs  incurred  by  custodians,  nominees,  fiduciaries  and  other  agents  in
forwarding the proxy material to you. The Company will also reimburse  brokerage
firms and other custodians and nominees for their expenses in distributing proxy
material to you. In addition to the  solicitation  made by this proxy statement,
certain directors,  officers and employees of the Company may solicit proxies by
telephone and personal contact.


                              ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

Nominees

At the annual  meeting,  five directors will be elected to hold office until the
next annual meeting of stockholders.  The Company's bylaws, as amended,  provide
that   directors  are  elected   annually  and  that  the  number  of  directors
constituting  the  board  of  directors  will  from  time to time be  fixed  and
determined  by a vote of a majority of the  Company's  directors  serving at the
time of such  vote.  The  board of  directors  is  currently  comprised  of five
members.

It is intended that the accompanying proxy, unless contrary instructions are set
forth  therein,  will be voted for the  election of the nominees for election as
directors.  If any  nominee  becomes  unavailable  for  election to the board of
directors,  the persons named in the proxy may act with discretionary  authority
to vote the proxy for such other  persons as may be  designated  by the board of
directors. However, the board is not aware of any circumstances likely to render
any nominee unavailable for election.  Under Nevada law directors are elected by
a  plurality  of the votes  cast at the  annual  meeting,  assuming  a quorum is
present.  The presence of a majority of the  outstanding  shares of common stock
and Series B preferred stock, voting as one class, will constitute a quorum. The
shares  held by each  holder of common  stock and Series B  preferred  Stock who
signs and returns  the  enclosed  form of proxy will be counted for  purposes of
determining the presence of a quorum at the meeting.

The following information is available with respect to the persons who are the
nominees for election at the annual meeting. All are incumbent directors and
executive officers of the Company. Included within the information below is
information concerning the business experience of each such person during the
past five years. The number of shares of common stock beneficially owned by each
of the directors who own stock as of October 19, 2006 is set forth in "Stock
Ownership."

         Roz Campisi Beadle, age 50, (Independent) Director since December 2003

         Ms. Beadle is Executive  Vice President of Unified  Housing  Foundation
and a licensed realtor.  She has a background in public relations and marketing.
Ms. Beadle is also extremely active in various civic and community  services and
is currently  working with the  Congressional  Medal of Honor Society and on the
Medal of Honor Host City Committee in Gainesville, Texas.

         Gene  S.  Bertcher,  age 57  (Affiliated)  Director  November  1989  to
September 1996 and since June 1999

         Mr.  Bertcher  was  elected   President  and  Chief  Financial  Officer
effective  November  1, 2004.  From  January 3, 2003 until that date he was also
Chief Executive Officer.  Mr. Bertcher has been Executive Vice President,  Chief
Financial  Officer and Treasurer of the Company since November 1989. He has been
a certified public accountant since 1973.

         James E. Huffstickler,  age 64,  (Independent)  Director since December
2003

         Mr.  Huffstickler has been Chief Financial Officer of Sunchase America,
Ltd., a multi-state  property  management  company,  for more than the past five
years.  He is a graduate of the  University  of South  Carolina and was formerly
employed by Southmark  Management,  Inc., a  nationwide  real estate  management
company. Mr. Huffstickler has been a certified public accountant since 1976.

         Dan Locklear, age 54 (Independent) Director since December 2003

         Mr.  Locklear has been chief financial  officer of Sunridge  Management
Group, a real estate management company,  for more than the past five years. Mr.
Locklear was formerly employed by Johnstown Management Company, Inc. and Trammel
Crow Company. Mr. Locklear has been a certified public accountant since 1981 and
a licensed real estate broker in the State of Texas since 1978.


                                       2


         Victor L. Lund, age 78 (Independent) Director since March 1996

         Mr. Lund founded Wedgwood Retirement Inns, Inc. in 1977, which became a
wholly owned subsidiary of the Company in 1996. For most of Wedgwood's existence
Mr.  Lund was  Chairman of the Board,  President  and Chief  Executive  Officer,
positions  he held until  Wedgwood  was  acquired  by the  Company.  Mr. Lund is
President and Chief Executive Officer of Wedgwood Services, Inc., a construction
services company not affiliated with the Company.


                                 STOCK OWNERSHIP

The following table sets forth as of October 19, 2006 certain  information  with
respect to all stockholders  known by the Company to own beneficially  more than
5% of the  outstanding  common stock as well as information  with respect to the
Company's common stock owned beneficially by each director, director nominee and
current executive  officer whose  compensation from the Company in 2005 exceeded
$100,000,  and by all  directors  and  executive  officers  as a  group.  Unless
otherwise  indicated,  each of these stockholders has sole voting and investment
power with respect to the shares beneficially owned.

                                                     Common Stock
                                           -------------------------------------
              Name of Beneficial Owner       No. of Shares    Percent of Class*
------------------------------------------ ---------------- --------------------
HKS Investment Corporation(1)                   108,994           11.04%
Gene S. Bertcher(2)                              71,811            7.28%
Roz Campisi Beadle                                  100             **
James E. Huffstickler                              --               --
Dan Locklear                                       --               --
JRG Investments, Inc.(3)(5)                     156,884           15.90%
TacCo Financial, Inc.(3)(4)(6)                  228,726           23.17%
International Health Products, Inc.(3)(7)         9,770             **
All executive officers and directors             71,911            7.29%
as a group (five persons)*
-----------------------
         *        Based on 986,954 shares of common stock outstanding at October
                  19, 2006.
         **       less than 1%

         1)       Consists  of  108,994  shares  of  common  stock  owned by HKS
                  Investment  Corporation  ("HKS").  According  to  an  original
                  statement  on Schedule  13D dated  January 9, 2006,  the group
                  consists of HKS, David Hensel, John Kellar and Marshall Stagg,
                  each of whom  are  deemed  to be the  beneficial  owner of all
                  108,994 shares. Hensel is stated to be a shareholder, director
                  and president of HKS.  Kellar is a  shareholder,  director and
                  vice   president   and   treasurer  of  HKS  and  Stagg  is  a
                  shareholder, director and secretary of HKS..

         2)       Consists  of  71,811  shares  of  common  stock  owned  by Mr.
                  Bertcher.

         3)       Based on a Schedule 13D,  amended  December 14, 2004, filed by
                  each of these entities and by Gene E. Phillips, an individual,
                  each of these entities owns of record the number of shares set
                  forth for such  entity in the  table.  The Form 13D  indicates
                  that  these   entities,   Mr.   Phillips  and  Basic   Capital
                  Management,  Inc.,  collectively,  may be  deemed  a  "Person"
                  within the meaning of Section 13D of the  Securities  Exchange
                  Act of 1934.

         4)       Consists  of 228,726  shares of common  stock  (which does not
                  include  156,884  shares held by JRG  Investments,  Inc. or an
                  option to 40,000  shares of common stock at an exercise  price
                  of $2.60  per  share).  TacCo  Financial,  Inc.  also  holds a
                  Warrant  to  purchase   170,000  shares  at  $3.58  per  share
                  exercisable  only after  stockholder  approval to exchange the
                  Company's  Series J 2% Preferred Stock for common stock before
                  October 1, 2005 and not  exercisable if such approval does not
                  occur.

         5)       Officers and Directors of JRG Investment Co., Inc. ("JRG") are
                  J. T. Tackett, Director,  President and Treasurer and E. Wayne
                  Starr,  Director,  Chairman  and CEO.  JRG is a  wholly  owned
                  subsidiary of Tacco Financial, Inc.

         6)       Officers and Directors of Tacco  Financial,  Inc.  ("TFI") are
                  J.T.  Tackett,  Director,  Chairman  and  CEO;  J.T.  Tackett,
                  Director,  President and  Treasurer and Mary K. Willett,  Vice
                  president  and  Secretary.  TFI's stock is owned by Electrical
                  Networks, Inc. (75%) and Starr Investments (25%).

         7)       Officers and Directors of International Health Products,  Inc.
                  ("IHPI")  are  Neil  C.  Crouch,   Director,   President   and
                  Treasurer;  Bradford A.  Phillips,  Vice  President  and Jamie
                  Cobb,  Secretary.  IHPI is  wholly  owned  by a trust  for the
                  benefit of the wife and children of Gene E. Phillips.


                                       3




                             EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

The following tables set forth the compensation paid by the Company for services
rendered during the fiscal years ended December 31, 2005,  2004, and 2003 to the
Chief Executive  Officer of the Company and to the other  executive  officers of
the Company whose total annual salary in 2005 exceeded  $100,000,  the number of
options  granted  to any of  such  persons  during  2005  and the  value  of the
unexercised options held by any of such persons on December 31, 2005.

                           Summary Compensation Table

                                                     Long Term
                                                   Compensation-
                                                     Number of
                                                     Shares of
     Name and                         Annual       Common Stock        All
     Principal                      Compensation-   Underlying        Other
     Position                Year     Salary          Options    Compensation(1)
     --------                ----   -------------  ------------  ---------------


Gene S. Bertcher,            2005    $186,000                         $ --
President Chief Financial    2004     137,000           --              --
Officer and until 11/1/04,   2003     134,000           --             6,500
Chairman and Chief
Executive Officer

(1) Constitutes directors' fees paid by the Company to the named individuals.



                               Option Grants Table
                       (Option Grants in Last Fiscal Year)

               Number of           Percent of
               Securities        Total Options
               Underlying          Granted to         Exercise or
                Options           Employees in         Base Price     Expiration
   Name         Granted           Fiscal Year          Per Share         Date
   ----        ----------        -------------        -----------     ----------

                                      NONE


                   Aggregated Option Exercises in Last Fiscal
                          Year and FY-End Option Values

                                                                    Value of Unexercised
                                        Number of Securities            In-the-Money
               Shares                  Underlying Unexercised         Options at 2002
              Acquired     Value       Options at 2002 FY-End              FY-End
   Name     on Exercise   Realized    Exercisable Unexercisable   Exercisable Unexercisable
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                      
                                      NONE



Stock Option Plan.

The Board of Directors  administers  the  Company's  1997 Stock Option Plan (the
"1997  Plan") and the 2000 Stock  Option  Plan (the "2000  Plan")  each of which
provides  for  grants  of  incentive  and  non-qualified  stock  options  to the
Company's executive officers,  as well as its directors and other key employees,



                                       4


and consultants.  Under the two Plans, options are granted to provide incentives
to   participants  to  promote   long-term   performance  of  the  Company  and,
specifically,  to retain and motivate senior management in achieving a sustained
increase  in  stockholder  value.  Currently,  none of the  Plans  has a pre-set
formula or criteria for  determining  the number of options that may be granted.
The  exercise  price for an option  granted is  determined  by the  Compensation
Committee,  in an amount not less than 100 percent of the fair  market  value of
the  Company's  common stock on the date of grant.  The  Compensation  Committee
reviews and evaluates the overall compensation package of the executive officers
and  determines  the awards based on the overall  performance of the Company and
the individual  performance of the executive officers. The Company's stock plans
total  50,000  shares of common  stock under the 1997 Plan and 50,000  shares of
common  stock  under the 2000 Plan.  Options  have been  granted  for all shares
reserved under the 1997 Plan and 10,000 shares for the 2000 Plan.

Compensation of Directors

The Company  pays each  non-employee  director a fee of $2,500 per year,  plus a
meeting  fee of  $2,000  for  each  board  meeting  attended.  Company  employee
directors serve with no fees being paid.



                 REPORT OF INDEPENDENT DIRECTORS ON COMPENSATION

The  compensation  paid to the  Company's  executive  officers is  reviewed  and
approved annually by the independent members of the board of directors acting as
the  Company's   Compensation   Committee.   In  addition  to  approving  annual
compensation for the Company's  executive  officers,  the independent  directors
approve any incentive awards for executive officers and other key employees, any
stock option grants and additional benefits.

The  Company's  compensation   philosophy  is  to  attract,  retain  and  reward
executives  who have shown they are capable of leading the Company in  achieving
its  business   objectives  and  performance  goals.  These  objectives  include
preserving and increasing the Company's  asset value;  positioning the Company's
operations  in  geographic   markets  offering  long  term,   profitable  growth
opportunities  and  preserving and enhancing  shareholder  value and keeping the
Company competitive in its marketing and operations.

The  board  of  directors   determined  that  the  primary  forms  of  executive
compensation  should be the  incentive  system  discussed  above.  The Company's
performance is a key  consideration  (to the extent that such performance can be
fairly attributed or related to an executive's performance) and each executive's
responsibilities  and  capabilities  are  key  considerations.  The  independent
directors  strive to keep  executive  compensation  competitive  for  comparable
positions in other  corporations where possible.  In addition,  the Compensation
Committee   believes  in  equity   compensation   wherein   executives  will  be
additionally  rewarded based on increasing the Company's shareholder value. Base
salaries are predicated on a number of factors, including:

          o    recommendation of the Chief Executive Officer;
          o    knowledge of similarly situated executives at other companies;
          o    the executive's position and responsibilities within the Company;
          o    the board of directors'  subjective evaluation of the executive's
               contribution to the Company's performance;
          o    the executive's experience and
          o    the term of the executive's tenure with the Company.


Chief Executive Officer Compensation
The Chief Executive  Officer of the Company  resigned  effective June 1, 2006 as
part of a Rescission  Agreement  between the Company and the holders of Series J
2% Preferred  Stock.  He received no  compensation  from CabelTel  International
Corporation in 2005.

Independent Directors

Roz Campisi Beadle
James Huffstickler
Dan Locklear
Victor L. Lund




                                       5


                             AUDIT COMMITTEE REPORT


The Audit Committee's duties and "charter," adopted by the board of directors on
December 9, 1991are to make  recommendations for the accounting firm to serve as
the  Company's  independent  auditors,  consult with the  Company's  independent
auditors  with  regard to any audit  plan  adopted  by the  Company,  review the
Company's financial  statements with the management and the independent auditors
prior to publication, determine that no restrictions are placed by management on
the scope of implementation of the independent auditors' function and performing
such other  functions as shall be appropriate to the effective  discharge of all
such duties and responsibilities.

In accordance with the charter of the Audit Committee, all of the members of the
Audit Committee are independent  pursuant to the American Stock Exchange listing
standards  and are  financially  literate  and at least one  member of the Audit
Committee has accounting or related financial  management  expertise.  The Audit
Committee,  on behalf of the Board,  oversees the Company's  financial reporting
process.  In fulfilling  its  oversight  responsibilities,  the Audit  Committee
reviewed  with the Company the audited  financial  statements  and the footnotes
thereto in the Annual  Report on Form 10-K and  discussed  with the  Company the
quality,  not  just  the  acceptability,   of  the  accounting  principles,  the
reasonableness  of  significant  judgments and the clarity of disclosures in the
financial  statements.  The Audit  Committee  reviewed  and  discussed  with the
outside auditor its judgments as to the quality,  not just the  acceptability of
the Company's accounting principles and such other matters as are required to be
discussed  by the Audit  Committee  with the  Company's  outside  auditor  under
generally accepted auditing  standards.  The Audit Committee  discussed with the
outside auditor the outside auditor's  independence required by the Independence
Standards Board to be made by the outside auditor to the Company. In reliance on
the reviews and discussions  referred to above, the Audit Committee  recommended
to the Board that the  audited  financial  statements  be included in the Annual
Report on Form 10-K, as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.


                              FINANCIAL INFORMATION

Financial Statement
The  consolidated  financial  statements  and auditor's  report,  the management
discussion  and  analysis of  financial  condition  and  results of  operations,
information  concerning  the quarterly  financial data for the fiscal year ended
December 31, 2005 and other  information  are included in the  Company's  Annual
Report on Form 10-K which was mailed to shareholders on April 30, 2006.

Independent Auditors
The board, in accordance with the  recommendation of its Audit Committee,  chose
the firm of Farmer,  Fuqua & Huff, P.C. ("FF&H") as independent auditors for the
Company on February 9, 2004. FF&H conducted the 2005 annual audit of the Company
at a cost to the Company of $30,000.

Representatives  of FF&H are  expected  to be  present  and to be  available  to
respond  to  appropriate   questions  at  the  annual  meeting.  They  have  the
opportunity  to make a statement  if they  desire to do so; they have  indicated
that, as of this date, they do not.

Prior to  engaging  FF&H the  Company's  auditor  was Grant  Thornton  & Company
("Grant Thornton").

Audit Fees
The following  table sets forth the  aggregate  fees for  professional  services
rendered to the Company for the years 2005 and 2004 by the  Company's  principal
accounting firms, Grant Thornton (January 2003 through January 2004) and Farmer,
Fuqua & Huff, P.C. (February 9, 2004 through December 31, 2004):

           Type of Fees                   2005             2004

         Audit Fees                     $ 96,550         $166,110
         Audit Related Fees                 --              4,701
         Tax Fees                          9,625            3,000
         All Other Fees                     --               --

               Total Fees               $106,175         $173,811


         Note: The amount of audit fees paid to Farmer,  Fuqua & Huff,  P.C. for
               January 2005 through December 2005 was $80,444. The amount of tax
               fees paid to Farmer,  Fuqua & Huff, P.C. for January 2005 through
               December 2005 was $8,750.  The audit fees paid to Grant  Thornton
               in 2004 was  $4,701 and the tax fees paid to Grant  Thornton  for
               January 2004 through December 2004 was $3,000.


                                       6


All services rendered by the principal auditors are permissible under applicable
laws and regulations  and were  pre-approved by either of the Board of Directors
or the Audit Committee,  as required by law. The fees paid to principal auditors
for  services  described  in the above  table fall under the  categories  listed
below:

         Audit Fees. These are fees for professional  services  performed by the
         principal  auditor  for the  audit of the  Company's  annual  financial
         statements and review of financial statements included in the Company's
         Form 10-Q filings and services that are normally provided in connection
         with statutory and regulatory filings or engagements.

         Audit-Related  Fees.  These are fees for assurance and related services
         performed by the principal  auditor that are reasonably  related to the
         performance  of  the  audit  or  review  of  the  Company's   financial
         statements. These services include attestation by the principal auditor
         that are not  required  by  statute or  regulation  and  consulting  on
         financial accounting/reporting standards.

         Tax Fees.  These are fees for  professional  services  performed by the
         principal  auditor with respect to tax  compliance,  tax planning,  tax
         consultation, returns preparation and reviews of returns. The review of
         tax returns includes the Company and its consolidated subsidiaries.

         All Other Fees. These are fees for other  permissible work performed by
         the   principal   auditor   that  does  not  meet  the   above-category
         descriptions.

These  services  are  actively  monitored  (as to both  spending  level and work
content) by the Audit  Committee to maintain  the  appropriate  objectivity  and
independence  in the principal  auditor's  core work,  which is the audit of the
Company's consolidated financial statements.

Financial Information Systems Design and Implementation Fees
Neither  FF&H nor Grant  Thornton  rendered  any  professional  services  to the
Company in 2005 or 2004 with respect to financial information systems design and
implementation.

The Audit Committee  considers that the services rendered by FF&H are compatible
with maintaining FF&H's independence in conducting the Company's audit.

Audit Committee

Dan Locklear
Jim Huffstickler
Victor Lund



                                       7



                                PERFORMANCE GRAPH

The following graph compares the cumulative total return on a $100 investment in
the company's common stock on December 31, 2001 through December 31, 2005, based
on the  company's  closing  stock price on December 31, for each of those years.
The same information is provided using the Standard & Poor 500 index and the Dow
Jones Total Market Index.







                               [GRAPHIC OMITTED]










Certain Relationships and Related Transactions

The following  paragraphs describe certain  transactions between the Company and
any stockholder beneficially owning more than 5% of the outstanding Common Stock
of the Company,  the executive  officers and directors of the Company,  director
nominees and members of the immediate family or affiliates of any of them, which
occurred since the beginning of the 2005 fiscal year.

Gene S.  Bertcher,  President and Chief  Financial  Officer of the Company,  was
indebted to the Company for an  aggregate of $92,500 for notes issued in payment
for shares of Common Stock. Mr. Bertcher's notes were secured by a pledge of 520
shares of common stock.  Interest on the notes accumulate at a rate equal to any
cash or stock dividends  declared on the purchased stock and was due in a single
installment  for each such note on or before October 1, 2003. On October 1, 2003
the collateral was returned to the Company and the debt was cancelled.

Until  October 18, 2001,  the Company had an employment  agreement  with Gene S.
Bertcher, who was then Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. The
agreement,  originally dated January 1, 1997,  provided for a two year term that
recommenced  each day. The agreement  provided for  compensation of $180,000 per
year and discretionary bonus.

On October 3, 2001 the Company  settled a dispute with a  significant  preferred
shareholder.  As part of the settlement the Company  transferred eleven assisted
living  communities  to that  shareholder.  While  the  Company  and its  senior
executives  believe the  settlement  was very favorable to the Company they also
recognized  that, due to the reduced size of the Company,  it would be necessary
to reduce expenses.



                                       8


On October  18, 2001 the  employment  contract  of Mr.  Bertcher  was amended to
reduce the cash drain to the Company.  The original employment contract provided
that any reduction in compensation  would trigger a required payment of $360,000
within five days. Mr.  Bertcher agreed to accept a note from the Company for the
amounts if paid on a timely  basis.  These notes were  non-interest  bearing and
were not due until December 31, 2004. The amended  employment  contract provided
that Mr.  Bertcher  would  receive a salary of  $14,000  per year.  The  amended
employment  contract also provide for incentive  compensation  for Mr. Bertcher.
The Company had agreed to conduct its future business through the use of limited
partnerships. Mr. Bertcher would receive a partnership interest in each of these
partnerships.  Depending  on the  circumstances  Mr.  Bertcher  would  receive a
limited  partnership  interest  of between 4% and 10.5%.  The Company had agreed
that during the term of the employment  contract,  which expired on December 31,
2004, all property acquisitions would be made using a partnership structure.

In 2003 the Board of Directors  decided to return to salary  based  compensation
for Mr. Bertcher. Mr. Bertcher received a base salary of $130,000 for 2003.

In December 2002, a partnership in which the Company had an interest owed monies
to the Company who, in turn, owed $360,000 to Mr.  Bertcher.  The Company offset
$132,500 of it's  obligation to Mr.  Bertcher  against its  receivable  from the
partnership. In December 2003 Mr. Bertcher agreed to convert the $227,500 he was
still owed into 71,161 newly issued shares of Company Common Stock at the market
value of the stock at the time of issuance.

The Company leases its 3,635 square feet of office space at a market rate of $24
per square foot from Art Four Hickory Corporation,  a wholly owned subsidiary of
TacCo Financial, Inc. TFI is a shareholder in the Company.

It is the policy of the Company  that all  transactions  between the Company and
any  officer or  director,  or any of their  affiliates,  must be  approved by a
majority of independent members of the board of directors of the Company. All of
the transactions described above were so approved.

Board Committees

The Board of Directors  held four meetings  during 2006.  No incumbent  director
attended  fewer than 75% of the  aggregate  of (i) the total  number of meetings
held by the Board during the period for which he or she had been a director, and
(ii) the total number of meetings  held by all  Committees of the Board on which
he or she served during the period that he or she served.

The Board of Directors  has standing  Audit,  Compensation  and  Governance  and
Nominating  Committees.  The charters of these  committees  are available on the
Company's web site,  www.cabeltel.us,  and are also  available in hard copy form
through a written request to the Company's Investor Relations  Department at the
address on page one of this proxy.

The current Audit Committee was formed on December 12, 2003, and its function is
to review the Company's  operating and accounting  procedures.  A Charter of the
Audit Committee has been adopted by the Board.  The current members of the Audit
Committee,  all of whom are independent within the SEC regulations,  the listing
standards of the AMEX,  and the Company's  Corporate  Governance  Guidelines are
Messrs.  Locklear (Chairman),  Huffstickler and Lund. Mr. Dan Locklear, a member
of the Committee is qualified as an Audit Committee  financial expert within the
meaning  of SEC  regulations,  and  the  Board  has  determined  that he has the
accounting and related financial  management expertise within the meaning of the
listing standards of the AMEX.

The  Governance  and  Nominating  Committee is  responsible  for  developing and
implementing  policies  and  practices  relating  to the  corporate  governance,
including  reviewing and monitoring  implementation  of the Company's  Corporate
Governance   Guidelines.   In  addition,  the  Committee  develops  and  reviews
background  information on candidates for the Board and makes recommendations to
the Board regarding such candidates.  The Committee also prepares and supervises
the Board's annual review of director  independence and the Board's  performance
and self-evaluation.  The Charter of the Governance and Nominating Committee was
adopted  on  October  20,  2004.  The  members  of  the  Committee  are  Messrs.
Huffstickler (Chairman) and Lund and Ms. Beadle.

The Board has also formed a  Compensation  Committee of the Board of  Directors,
adopted a Charter  for the  Compensation  Committee  on October  20,  2004,  and
selected Ms. Beadle (Chairman) and Messrs.  Huffstickler and Locklear as members
of such  Committee.  The members of the Board of  Directors  on the date of this
Report and the Committees of the Board on which they serve are identified below:



                                       9


------------------------ ------------------- ------------------ ----------------
                                               Governance and
                                                Nominating        Compensation
    Director               Audit Committee      Committee           Committee
Roz Campisi Beadle                                  |X|             Chairman
Gene S. Bertcher
James E. Huffstickler             |X|            Chairman              |X|
Dan Locklear                   Chairman                                |X|
Victor L. Lund                    |X|               |X|
------------------------ ------------------- ------------------ ----------------

During October 2004, the Board adopted its Corporate Governance Guidelines.  The
Guidelines adopted by the Board meet or exceed the new listing standards adopted
during the year by the AMEX. Pursuant to the Guidelines, the Board undertook its
annual  review of  director  independence,  and during  this  review,  the Board
considered transactions and relationships between each director or any member of
his or her immediate family and the Company and its subsidiaries and affiliates,
including those reported under Certain  Relationships  and Related  Transactions
below. The Board also examined  transactions and relationships between directors
or their  affiliates  and members of the  Company's  senior  management or their
affiliates.  As  provided in the  Guidelines,  the purpose of such review was to
determine whether such  relationships or transactions were inconsistent with the
determination that the director is independent.

Section 16(a) Beneficial Ownership Reporting Compliance

Based solely upon a review of Forms 3, 4 and 5 furnished to the Company pursuant
to Rule  16a-3(e)  promulgated  under the  Securities  Exchange Act of 1934 (the
"Exchange Act"), or upon written  representations  received by the Company,  the
Company is not aware of any failure by any director, officer or beneficial owner
of more than 10% of the Company's  common stock to file with the  Securities and
Exchange Commission, on a timely basis, any Form 3, 4 or 5 relating to 2004.

                                  ANNUAL REPORT

The annual report to stockholders,  including consolidated financial statements,
for the year ended December 31, 2005 was mailed to shareholders  April 30, 2006.
The annual report is not a part of the proxy solicitation  material.  The annual
report is the Company's Form 10-K for 2005,  including the financial  statements
and schedules,  as filed with the Securities Exchange Commission.  A stockholder
may request copies of any exhibit to the Form 10-K and the Company will charge a
fee to cover  expenses to prepare and send any  exhibits.  You may request these
from: Corporate Secretary,  CabelTel International Corporation,  1755 Wittington
Place, Suite 340, Dallas, Texas 75234.


                                  OTHER MATTERS

The board of  directors  does not intend to bring any other  matters  before the
annual  meeting  and has not been  informed  that any  other  matters  are to be
presented  to the  annual  meeting by  others.  In the event that other  matters
properly  come  before the  annual  meeting  or any  adjournments  thereof it is
intended that the persons named in the accompanying proxy and acting there under
will vote in accordance with their best judgment.

                             DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSION
                          OF PROPOSALS TO BE PRESENTED
                   AT THE 2007 ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS

Any  stockholder who intends to present a proposal at the 2007 annual meeting of
stockholders  must file such  proposal  with the  Company by January 1, 2007 for
possible  inclusion in the Company's  proxy statement and form of proxy relating
to the meeting.


                                              By Order of the Board of Directors

                                               /s/ Oscar Smith

                                              Oscar Smith, Secretary


                                       10


                       CabelTel International Corporation

           This Proxy is Solicited on Behalf of the Board of Directors

The undersigned hereby  acknowledges  receipt of the notice of annual meeting of
stockholders  of  CabelTel  International  Corporation,   to  be  held  at  1755
Wittington  Place,  Third  Floor,  Dallas,  Texas  75234,  on  December  1, 2006
beginning at 10:00 AM.,  Dallas  Time,  and the proxy  statement  in  connection
therewith and appoints Gene S. Bertcher and Oscar Smith,  and each of them,  the
undersigned's proxies with full power of substitution for and in the name, place
and stead of the  undersigned,  to vote upon and act with  respect to all of the
shares of common stock and Series B preferred  stock of the Company  standing in
the name of the  undersigned,  or with  respect  to  which  the  undersigned  is
entitled to vote and act, at the meeting and at any adjournment thereof.

     The undersigned directs that the undersigned's proxy be voted as follows:

1.   ELECTION OF       [ ] FOR all nominees            [ ] WITHHOLD
     DIRECTORS             listed below (except as         AUTHORITY
                           marked to the contrary          to vote for the
                           below)                          nominees listed below



Nominees:  Roz Campisi  Beadle,  Gene S. Bertcher,  James E.  Huffstickler,
           Dan Locklear, Victor L. Lund

(Instruction:  To withhold authority to vote any individual nominee,  write that
nominee's name on the line provided below.)

________________________________________________________________________________

2.   RATIFICATION  OF  THE  SELECTION  OF  FARMER,  FUQUA  &  HUFF,  PC  AS  THE
     INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM.

        [ ] FOR         [ ] AGAINST     [ ] ABSTAIN

3.   IN THE  DISCRETION  OF THE PROXIES,  ON ANY OTHER MATTER WHICH MAY PROPERLY
     COME BEFORE THE MEETING.

        [ ] FOR         [ ] AGAINST     [ ] ABSTAIN

This proxy will be voted as specified  above. If no  specification is made, this
proxy will be voted for the election of the director nominees in item 1 above.

The undersigned  hereby revokes any proxy  heretofore  given to vote or act with
respect to the  common  stock or Series B  preferred  stock of the  Company  and
hereby ratifies and confirms all that the proxies, their substitutes,  or any of
them may lawfully do by virtue hereof.

If more  than  one of the  proxies  named  shall  be  present  in  person  or by
substitute  at the meeting or at any  adjournment  thereof,  the majority of the
proxies so present and voting, either in person or by substitute, shall exercise
all of the powers hereby given.

Please date,  sign and mail this proxy in the enclosed  envelope.  No postage is
required.

                                              Date _______________________, 2006


                                              __________________________________
                                              Signature of Stockholder

                                              __________________________________
                                              Signature of Stockholder

                                          Please  date this  proxy and sign your
                                          name  exactly  as it  appears  hereon.
                                          Where  there is more  than one  owner,
                                          each should  sign.  When signing as an
                                          attorney,   administrator,   executor,
                                          guardian or  trustee,  please add your
                                          title  as  such.   If  executed  by  a
                                          corporation,   the  proxy   should  be
                                          signed by a duly authorized officer.