COMMENT FROM THE BLOGGER
Instead, what happened??? Did conspiracy of engineered corruption, impunity,
graft and greediness of the few Corporate Special Business Interest consume
this lucrative proposal agenda from being realized, instead the scramble for Land
in Africa brought more civil war, terrorism and invasion that brought more injustice,
pain and sufferings to the people of Africa in Africa......???
Judy Miriga
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$215 Million Central Africa Backbone Program Will Bring Low Cost, High Speed Internet to the Region |
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Press Release No:2010/094.SDN | ||
Contact
In Geneva: Ian LarsenPhone: +41(0)79 477 96 17
E-mail: ilarsen@worldbank.org
GENEVA, October 6, 2009 – Today
the Executive Board of Directors of the World Bank Group has announced
its endorsement of the $215 million, ten-year Central African Backbone
Program (CAB Program). This program will support the countries of the
Central African region in developing their high-speed telecommunications
backbone infrastructure to increase the availability of high-speed
Internet and reduce end-user prices. The CAB Program will also help
countries harmonize the laws and regulations that govern the ICT sector
to increase private sector investment and improve competition.
Three
countries – Cameroon, Chad and Central African Republic (CAR) – are
participating in the initial $26.2 million phase of the Program.
A further eight countries are also eligible to participate in the
Program—Republic of Congo, Equatorial Guinea, the Democratic Republic of
Congo, Gabon, Niger, Nigeria, São Tomé and Principe, and Sudan.
The
CAB Program is being supported through a partnership between the World
Bank Group and the African Development Bank (AfDB). The program also
aims to leverage an additional US$98 million from the private sector.
In conjunction with the Economic and Monetary Community of Central
Africa (CEMAC), the African Union Commission (AUC) will play an
important role in facilitating inter-governmental cooperation and policy
harmonization. The International Finance Corporation (IFC) will also
assist governments in structuring Public Private Partnerships under the
program.
Development Impact
The CAB Program brings much needed connectivity to Central Africa. Until
now, people in Central Africa have the lowest quality and highest cost
Internet and telephone services in Africa. The population pays up to two
times more in monthly Internet rates than people living in other
African countries, and up to three times more than those living in other
parts of the world. “The CAB
Program is very important for the countries involved and lies at the
heart of their development strategies. It will assist countries to
strengthen their enabling environment, create competition and,
ultimately increase access and lower the costs for end users,” said Mary Barton-Dock, World Bank Country Director for Cameroon, Chad and Central African Republic.
In its recent Information and Communications for Development 2009: Extending Reach and Increasing Impact, the World Bank found that for
every 10 percentage-point increase in high speed Internet connections
there is an increase in economic growth of 1.3 percentage points. The
report also identifies the mobile platform as the single most powerful
way to reach and deliver public and private services to hundreds of
millions of people in remote and rural areas across the developing
world.
“Ultimately,
our goal is to develop regional and national broadband backbones and
significantly reduce the cost of ICT services in Central Africa. Through
better and affordable connectivity, the aim is to leverage the
transformational powers of ICTs to support economic growth, SME
development, employment creation, productivity gains and trade
integration in the region,” says Mohsen Khalil, Director of Global Information and Communications Technologies at the World Bank Group.
Modernizing the ICT Sector
In
addition to infrastructure development, the CAB Program will strengthen
the capacity of public institutions such as the sectoral ministries and
regulatory authorities and will promote a competition-friendly
environment by liberalizing the sector and restructuring
telecommunications operators.
The
Program is also meant to be a model of regional integration and
successful public-private partnerships. Its design and implementation
require the cooperation of several countries and international and
regional organizations. Design goals will be to: (i) maximize the use of
private financing (or minimize the use of public financing); (ii)
ensure feasibility and attractiveness of the transaction; and (iii)
secure open access to regional connectivity infrastructure and ensure
competitive, reasonable tariff of international, regional and national
capacity.
“This
program is a great example of the World Bank’s increasing emphasis on
regional infrastructure as part of Africa’s development,” said Rick Scobey, Acting Director for Regional Integration in Africa at the World Bank.
Part of a Broader Regional Strategy
The
World Bank Group and African Development Bank (AfDB), in partnership,
are committing significant resources and are making progress on the
ground in helping to achieve the goals outlined at the October 2007
Connect Africa Summit. The
Summit was convened by the International Telecommunications Union, the
World Bank, the African Development Bank, the African Union, and the
United Nations Global Alliance for ICT and Development.
This
partnership has already launched three major regional connectivity
programs, among a range of other ICT activities, with a fourth in the
pipeline.
Regional Communications Infrastructure Program (RCIP)
The
World Bank is providing US$424 million in financing for the Regional
Communications Infrastructure Program (RCIP) to support regional
connectivity and transparency in government through the use of ICT. The
Program is available to all countries in the East and Southern Africa
region and can be tailored to each country’s specific needs and
priorities. The first phase of RCIP included Kenya, Madagascar and
Burundi and was approved by the Board of the World Bank in 2007. The
second phase was for Rwanda and was approved in 2008. The third phase
includes Tanzania, Mozambique and Malawi and was approved by the Board
of the World Bank in June 2009.
East African Submarine Cable System (EASSy) – World Bank Group, AfDB and other Development Finance Institutions (DFIs)
EASSy is
a 10,000 km submarine fiber-optic cable running along the East Coast of
Africa from Sudan to South Africa. It will directly connect eight of
the countries along the route and indirectly connect all of the others
in the region to the international communications infrastructure. It
will provide broadband connectivity to the global fiber-optic cable
networks, supplying low-cost, high bandwidth capacity to the markets in
the region.
The
project was developed by a consortium of 26 telecommunications
operators, mostly from Eastern and Southern Africa with the support of
five DFIs: International Finance Corporation (IFC), the AfDB, European
Investment Bank, Agence Française de Développement (AFD) and Kreditanstalt für Wiederaufbau (KfW).
The total cost of the project is $235 million with around $70 million
coming as debt-financing from the DFIs. Of this, IFC contributed $32.7
million and AfDB contributed U$14.5 million.
EASSy
is one of three submarine fiber-optic cables that are due to become
operational in the region between 2009 and 2010. Experience shows that
competition between submarine cables is the best way to achieve
efficient and affordable ICT services.
West African Power Pool – Joint World Bank-AfDB
Limited inter-country connectivity in the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) region results in inefficient, costly routing of calls between neighboring countries by satellite.
Policy makers in the region have identified the emerging regional
electricity transmission infrastructure as a way of improving high
bandwidth regional communications capacity.
These electricity networks have built in fiber-optic cables whose spare
capacity can be utilized to provide backbone services to communications
providers on a wholesale basis.
The
World Bank and AfDB have been closely involved in developing the
regional electricity transmission infrastructure through the West Africa
Power Pool (WAPP). This transmission infrastructure will also be able to carry telecommunications traffic.
In 2008, a stakeholder workshop in Benin endorsed the opportunity and
committed to removing the bottlenecks associated with creating a
regional backhaul network.
The
World Bank and AfDB continue to provide support to the development of
this network in FY09 through the preparation of the detailed technical,
commercial and financial feasibility studies.
Staff are also working with governments in the region to address the
legal/regulatory and contractual arrangements for implementation, and
continue to work with other donor agencies to ensure that efforts in
this area are complementary.
“Regional
communication infrastructure programs such as the CAB program
illustrate what can be achieved through a strong partnership between the
governments, private-sector and development partners,” said Yann Burtin,
Project Manager for the CAB Program. The contributions of the AfDB and
of the African Union Commission are essential to the process, added
Burtin.
“The
CAB program is an exciting development for Chad, Cameroon and the
Central African Program. Regional connectivity projects like this one
are increasingly important in the African Development Bank’s strategy
for the region,” said Amadou Thierno Diallo, Manager for Energy and ICT at theAfDB.
For more information, please visit:
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http://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/NEWS/0,,contentMDK:22340869~pagePK:64257043~piPK:437376~theSitePK:4607,00.html |
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