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Page 3 of 11 Heloise Emdon Senior Program Officer, IDRCThe
cost of internet access remains very high for African universities and
what is needed is gigabits, not megabits (northern institutions are
already talking in terms of terrabits).
While mobile
connectivity is achieving a level of universal access (6-9% in Africa),
the cost of this connectivity remains extremely high. And, although
mobile telephony fills the gap for interpersonal communication it falls
short of meeting research and education networking needs of
universities, research institutions to access online materials, and
contribute to the world of research. Although public access in
high density areas is improving, and telecentres in the cities are
achieving business sustainability in places, this merely illustrates
that cost of access is still high and too high for private access.
Extortionist
rates for rural broadband access (in Mozambique for instance USD 600
per month for 64k bps connection) are why we have supported and have
experimented with ways in which communities can amortise these costs
through wireless connectivity to share the high cost of the access
points, and various business and technical models have emerged, but due
to their nature remain constrained by either regulatory issues
(monopolies on frequency and rights of way, restricting WiFi mainly to
CPE). This all points to the issues of lack of fixed line
infrastructure (which in itself makes the cost of cellular calls very
expensive). It also reflects on the poor policy and regulatory regimes
which have not geared the fixed line build out against the high
revenues coming in through cellular. Policy, regulation and
market structure remain endemically pressing issues and the capacity
that needs to be built requires endless funding. Research ICT Africa's
work to inform academic and executive programmes and institutions like
NeTel Africa via training will continue to rely on publicly funded and
mostly foreign public funding to ensure that these capacities are built
up over time. Three years of funding from the DOT Force era is not
enough time to shift paradigms through education, training and exposure
to market interventions and to public-private regulation management of
market behaviour. Content will follow communication
infrastructure, so claims of insufficient “content“ for developing
regions is less a concern for me. We continue to invest in localisation
efforts through software, open source and programme development to make
localisation processes easier, and there remains hardware (keyboards,
etc.).
An area we have started to work in, and convincingly
so, is to promote public sector service delivery through more efficient
services, such as electronic populations registration; electronic
medical records; electronic management information systems, to make
micro-credit institutions more efficient and able to scale up (we are
promoting use of Grameen Technology Centre's Mifos management
information system FOSS). This is relevant to the banking sector and to
the mobile telecom sectors wanting to deliver banking. * * * * * * * * * *
However, if the G8 chose only one
theme, I would say it should be to strengthen public health systems in
Africa, most of them groaning under the pressure of dealing with the
HIV/AIDS pandemic, and help make them able to deal with the burden of
disease, scale up through efficient electronic medical records, report
regularly to the donor community that is funding the anti-retroviral
treatment (mainly US and Pepfar) and to commit to a this over a five to
ten year period. We have found open source solutions that can go to
scale without huge investment and can what is more it is saving lives,
stemming the tide of untimely AIDS deaths and unnecessary parentless
homes and growing numbers of AIDS orphans.
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