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Africa online: getting set for a digital revolution

Source: Africa Renewal

15 September 2006 | EN

Open access to scientific journals will be extended until 2015

Morguefile

Only 2.6 per cent of Africans have access to the Internet, compared with 69 per cent of Americans.

But plans are afoot to bridge the 'digital divide' and transform Africa from passive consumer to a producer of Internet content.

From 2007, the continent will be connected to the rest of the world through a high-speed telecommunications cable, allowing users to download large files or listen to online radio.

The East Africa Submarine Cable System, or 'EASSy', will stretch underwater for 9,900 kilometres from Durban, South Africa, to Sudan.

The plans were agreed at last year's World Summit on the Information Society in Tunisia, as part of a series of information and communication technology projects outlined in this article.

One project is trying to make software and Internet content more accessible by using Arabic and African languages. The lack of information available in local languages is a major reason why Internet use is so limited in Africa.

South Africa is trying to involve its citizens in deciding how to allocate, manage and regulate space on its Internet domain name '.za'.

And many countries are connecting schools across the continent under a programme called SchoolNet Africa.

Link to full article in African Renewal

Comments (1)

hmomoton ( Inter-Digital Computer School | Liberia )

22 November 2010

I want to thank African Leaders for their fast sighteness in developing the ICT policy. I hope all Africans will support the goood technological advancement in order to improve its scientific, cultural and socioeconomic development. I believe no nations or individuals can achieve without ICT. As for my country and government we are far from been there as other nations are doing. We Liberian continue to drag our feet on the issues of ICT in Liberia. It is my hope and prayer that God will direct my government to think positively to engage in the development of ICT in Liberia. I want to also encourage African leaders that Africa is for Africans, development in Africa is for Africans, a developed ICT policy for Africa is for African future leaders (children). I want to also mentioned here that all African leaders should support one another in order to be on par with other nations around the world.

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