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Zimbabwe's
Cabinet Approves National ICT Strategy Plan, Blueprint
The
Herald (Zimbabwe)
January 11, 2010
http://allafrica.com/stories/201001111164.html
Cabinet
has approved the newly-crafted national information communication
technology strategy plan and the ICT blueprint is expected be launched
at the end of next month.
Information
Communication Technology Minister Nelson Chamisa said the plan would
be formally presented to principals of the country's main political
parties -- President Mugabe, Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai and
his deputy Arthur Mutambara before it is unveiled to the public.
"The plan
has been approved by Cabinet and will run from now to 2015. It is
either going to be launched at the end of this month or February
when the principals are back," said Minister Chamisa.
He said the
plan would revolutionalise the local ICT facet and spur the growth
momentum attained since the beginning of last year. The ICT plan,
said Minister Chamisa, addresses issues of licencing, number portability,
infrastructure, mobile phone security, digital security, e-governance,
e-education and e-health as well as the overall growth trajectory
for the ICT sector.
In addition,
the strategy plan provides for the establishment of an interministerial
consultative body that would advise the ICT Minister. The decision
to formulate a national ICT strategy plan followed the realisation
that the country only had an ICT policy, which had been overtaken
by events due to dynamism of ICTs.
As such, there
was need to review the ICT policy and also devise an implementation
matrix to bridge the technology gap between Zimbabwe and other countries
doing better in this regard. "We were very much behind other
countries on the continent and the world, but we are certainly catching
up to overtake them".
Minister Chamisa
said the objective was to ensure Zimbabwe does not only fully embrace
ICT as a basic modern day technology, but becomes a hub of ICT software
and hardware development.
There has been
notable progress in the country's ICT sector since the beginning
of last year, the most notable progress having been the improved
accessibility of a range of mobile phone and Internet service and
the installation of related infrastructure.
For instance,
mobile phone service accessibility stood at 10 percent at the beginning
of last year, but is now estimated at 24 percent. However, considerable
challenges have been encountered in accessibility of fixed telecommunications
where the sole provider of the services, Tel-One, has not been able
to match demand.
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