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Harnessing
the Internet for development
Gumisai
Mutume, Africa Renewal
Extracted from Vol.20 #2 (July 2006)
July, 2006
http://www.un.org/ecosocdev/geninfo/afrec/vol20no2/202-harnessing-internet.html
While Africa’s post-independence leaders
dreamed of linking their countries through road and railway networks,
today’s leaders are on the cusp of making their own dream come true
— connecting African countries with each other and the rest of the
world through a high-speed telecommunications cable. Originating
in Durban, South Africa, a broadband telecommunications cable will
stretch underwater for 9,900 kilometres through the Indian Ocean
to its final destination, Port Sudan. The East Africa Submarine
Cable System (EASSy) will, among other functions, support broadband
Internet connections that transmit information at up to 40 times
the speed of dial-up telephone links. Such high-speed connections
allow users to download large files such as video clips or listen
to online radio.
EASSy is one of the information and
communications technology (ICT) projects of the continental development
plan, the New Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD). In June,
African telecommunications and technology ministers endorsed the
immediate start of the project, which is expected to cost $300 mn
and is due for completion in 2007. The project will significantly
cut telecommunications costs within Africa and with countries overseas,
thereby helping the continent to bridge the "digital divide"
— the gulf between people and countries with access to knowledge
and information and those without.
‘African solidarity’
"We must commit
ourselves to ensuring the successful implementation of the NEPAD
broadband ICT infrastructure project," says South African Communication
Minister Ivy Matsepe-Casaburri. The project, she says, offers responses
to the continent’s challenges "through African solidarity and
partnership" and will "promote African self-sufficiency."
The EASSy project is part of an African
plan to ensure that all countries are connected to each other through
a broadband system. These countries will in turn be linked to the
rest of the world through other submarine cables. Currently, the
lack of adequate broadband connections has been a major hindrance
to Africa’s promotion of greater ICT use. There are few direct high-capacity
Internet links between African countries. High-capacity transmission
lines are mainly concentrated in the US, Europe and Asia.
As a result, about 75 per cent of Internet
traffic in Africa first goes through Europe or the US and is then
routed back, a very costly process. For example, while Benin and
Burkina Faso are neighbours, Internet traffic between them passes
through France or Canada. The International Development Research
Centre (IDRC) in Canada estimates that Africa spends $400 mn each
year on the use of international bandwidth for national or regional
data. In fact, in many cases, e-mails sent between two Internet
service providers in the same country are sent abroad and then rerouted
back because domestic "Internet exchange points" are lacking.
The slow pace of Internet development
on the continent is reflected in low levels of use. Only 2.6 per
cent of Africans have access to the Internet, compared with 10 per
cent of Asians, 36 per cent of Europeans and 69 per cent of North
Americans. When broken down by country, the level of Internet use
in most of Africa is even lower, since two countries, Egypt and
South Africa, account for nearly half of all users.
Low-speed transmission lines also mean
that Internet users in Africa find it much faster and cheaper to
download material rather than to post their own onto the Internet.
This leaves Africans primarily as consumers instead of producers
of Web content. To redress this imbalance, and in line with pledges
to develop a more inclusive Internet that they made at last year’s
World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) in Tunisia, African
countries have initiated a series of ICT projects. In addition to
EASSy, these include a venture by South Africa to involve the public
in the development of its Internet domain ".za", attempts
to translate software and other Web tools into African languages
to allow more Africans to produce their own Web content, and numerous
efforts to broaden the use of the Internet for distance learning.
A truly public Internet
In South Africa, the
government recently launched a programme to make the Internet a
truly public good by soliciting input from citizens on how they
want the country’s electronic communications system to operate.
The move opens up to public discussion an area that has so far been
the preserve of computer experts, and is part of a plan to establish
rules to guide the use of the country’s Internet domain name ".za".
Just as with any other medium, decisions have to be made about how
to allocate, manage and regulate space.
A few years ago, the South African
government appointed a local committee to run its Internet domain
in the public interest. It had previously been operated by an individual
who pioneered Internet development in the country. In order to be
more inclusive, the committee will solicit input from South Africans,
in ordinary language that people outside the Internet community
can relate to, says Minister Matsepe-Casaburri, "so that even
my granny can understand." The goal is to create policies that
will make the Internet accessible to the majority, while reducing
poverty and spreading information on health and development.
In its brief life, the Internet has
evolved into an agent of revolutionary change in health, education,
journalism, politics and other sectors. It is increasingly being
used to transmit lifesaving medical information, coordinate relief
for victims of natural disasters and provide uncensored information
to people trapped under repressive governments.
The World Summit on the Information
Society, which took place in two phases – in Switzerland in 2003
and in Tunisia last year – has given a new impetus to Africa’s efforts
to harness this tool, argues Prof. Olivier Nana Nzepa, an ICT lecturer
at Cameroon’s University of Yaounde. The key question, he says,
is how to achieve the WSIS principles of "transparency, public
accountability, public participation and equity," while simultaneously
promoting much wider use of ICTs.
Language diversity
Another area of growing
concern is the absence of African languages on the Internet. The
dominance of European languages has limited the spread of Internet
use by excluding those not fully literate in those languages. African
information ministers meeting in Dakar, Senegal, last year urged
new programmes to promote African and other languages on the Internet.
This, they argued, would help "fight against the linguistic
digital divide and ensure the participation of all in the emerging
new society."
The original design of the Internet’s
domain name system had a strong technical bias towards English.
Even languages such as French, Spanish and German are at a disadvantage
when it comes to naming Internet hosts, because they use accented
characters that the system does not support. In addition, existing
tools to create Web pages, such as HTML (Hyper Text Mark-up Language),
are based on English or other Western languages, requiring programmers
to be functionally literate in those languages to generate content.
"Limiting people to the use of
ICTs in a foreign language tends to exacerbate the digital divide,
makes ICT adoption long, difficult and expensive, and impoverishes
local cultures," notes a study by the Pan African Localization
Project. Funded by Canada’s IDRC and implemented by non-governmental
African ICT and language development organizations Kabissa and Bisharat,
the project seeks to "localize" software and Internet
content by using Arabic and African languages.
The three-year project, launched in
2005, will survey the current state of localization in Africa, hold
a training workshop for experts and develop a Web-based database
of resources. "This is a timely and exciting project that has
the potential to speed the evolution and increase the impact of
information technology in Africa," says Mr. Don Osborn of Bisharat.
Creating local content and laying high-speed
cables to carry it will make it easier to use the Internet as an
effective tool for education. Governments generally acknowledge
that building more classrooms and training more teachers to reach
those currently outside the school system cannot by themselves lead
to universal primary education by 2015, one of the Millennium Development
Goals (MDGs) adopted by UN member states in 2000.
"Providing connectivity through
the use of the Internet and computers to schools and public centres
is one of the priorities of governments," says Ms. Josephine
Ouédraogo, acting deputy executive secretary at the UN Economic
Commission for Africa (ECA), headquartered in Addis Ababa. "ICTs
have already begun to exert massive transformation of education
systems worldwide. The best teachers in the world are becoming available
anywhere at the click of a mouse."
Ethiopia, one of Africa’s poorest nations,
has networked all of its 500 secondary schools and 12 universities.
Established distance learning services in Botswana, Cameroon, Côte
d’Ivoire, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia,
Nigeria and Tanzania are being augmented by ICT applications. And
in many African countries multipurpose community telecentres are
hooked up to the African Virtual University, an online college headquartered
in Kenya, and schools are connected across national boundaries to
other schools in 31 countries under a programme called SchoolNet
Africa.
Beyond the need for greater financing
for such efforts, the challenges of broadening Internet access "require
a new commitment to work together if we are to realize the benefits
of the information society," says International Telecommunication
Union Secretary-General Yoshio Utsumi. "Seeing the fruits of
today’s powerful knowledge-based tools in the most impoverished
economies will be the true test of an engaged, empowered and egalitarian
information society."
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