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International Telecommunication Union
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AFRICA TELECOM 98 – Hailed a Triumph by Africa’s Leaders
Johannesburg, 9 May 1998 — Today was the final day of AFRICA TELECOM 98, the fourth regional
telecommunications Exhibition and Forum for the Africa region, which was held from 4-9 May at the Expo Centre, Johannesburg.
It was organized by the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) and hosted by the government of the Republic of South
Africa.
The event, which was opened on Monday 4 May by the South African President, Nelson Mandela, was hailed
as a triumph by many of Africa’s leaders, who came to help build the African Renaissance – an idea launched last
year by South Africa’s Deputy President, Thabo Mbeki. In a century dominated by what Jay Naidoo, South Africa’s Minister
for Posts, Telecommunications and Broadcasting, described as Afro-pessimism, Africa Telecom 98 was notable for the
commitment and tremendous spirit of optimism expressed by government ministers, exhibitors, Forum speakers, delegates and
the world’s media.
The Opening Ceremony featured presentations from Mr Jean-Patrick Baré, the President of Telecom,
Minister Jay Naidoo, Dr Pekka Tarjanne, the ITU’s Secretary-General, President Nelson Mandela, and Mr Noah Samara,
the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of WorldSpace, who sponsored the ceremony. Nelson Mandela spoke of the huge,
untapped market which Africa represents and of the need to create a dedicated African Telecommunications Development Fund.
"Such a fund," he said, "would finance the infrastructure projects needed to extend technology to every
village in Africa, and would certainly put the continent on the map of the global information society." WorldSpace,
whose goal is to provide digital direct audio and multimedia services to over four billion listeners, was represented by its
founder, Noah Samara, who said that ever since he was six years old his dream had been that one day communications would be
available to all.
On the afternoon of the opening day Deputy President Thabo Mbeki spoke at the Telecommunications
Imbizo, a special session of the Forum. Traditionally, an Imbizo is a meeting of leaders to discuss the appropriate
strategy to use in a forthcoming battle, or war – in this case the battle for improved telecommunications access across
the whole African continent. Ghana’s Minister of Communications, Ekwow Spio-Garbrah, who was chairing the session, said
that in the past Africans had been passengers in the telecommunications car, and colonial interests had been the drivers.
"Now," he said, "It is time for us Africans to learn how to drive, how to take the driving seat, and even how
to build or buy our own cars."
Both at the Exhibition and at the Forum there was great enthusiasm voiced for smart partnership,
where the interests of investors and governments were balanced so that investors saw a good return on their capital, while
governments were able to pursue their human development goals. Africa is the world’s second fastest growing region, and
GDP is forecast by the IMF to achieve 4.7 per cent growth in 1998.
The Exhibition at AFRICA TELECOM 98 was more than twice as big as that at the previous AFRICA TELECOM Exhibition, and attracted nearly 20,000
telecommunications professionals, who came to see the latest technology on display from 443 exhibitors from the
telecommunications, information technology and audio-visual entertainment fields. Industry leaders at the highest level,
from ambassadors and government ministers, to the CEOs of the front-ranked market players, participated, along with some of
the most respected industry analysts and commentators. All of Africa’s countries were represented on a Pan-African
Renaissance stand.
The Opening Session of the Forum, held on Tuesday 5 May, was chaired by Jean-Patrick Baré, and
featured speeches by Pekka Tarjanne and Jay Naidoo. There was also a presentation by Craig Barrett, President and Chief
Operating Officer of Intel Corporation, which was broadcast live in the United States via webcast – a process which used
some 25 per cent of South Africa’s entire dial-up capability. One of the demonstrations was a live videoconference between
Mr Barrett and a Digital Village in Soweto, where 20 multimedia PCs had recently been connected to the Internet. When
asked what difference this had made to him, Joe Mphahle, a teacher in Soweto, said "the world is at our fingertips
now." Macdonald Homer, another user of the Digital Village, reminded the audience of Jay Naidoo’s theory that the
next Bill Gates will come from Africa. "In which case," he said, "the next Craig Barrett may come from
Soweto."
The Forum at AFRICA TELECOM 98 was especially well attended, with standing room only available at some sessions such as those concerned
with financing, regulation, and technology and women – a session which was opened by Mary Robinson, the United Nations’
Commissioner for Human Rights, speaking live via videoconference from New York. Altogether more than a thousand people
attended the Forum, which encompassed a Strategies and a Technology Summit, billed together under the single theme Strategies
for Sustainable Development. The Forum was a milestone event for Telecom, in that it was telecast to Africa and around
the world on the Internet.
A session on Emergency Telecommunications was held to address the issue of reaching an international
agreement on transporting emergency communications equipment across borders without needing customs clearance or licensing.
ICET 98 (The Intergovernmental Conference on Emergency Telecommunications) is being held in Tampere, Finland, from 16-18
June, to adopt the Convention on the provision of telecommunication resources for disaster mitigation and relief operations.
The Forum was closed by Henry Chasia, Deputy Secretary-General of the ITU, and Thabo Mbeki, South
Africa’s Deputy President, on Friday 8 May. In his address Dr Chasia said "this will be remembered as a watershed
event which has helped shape the new Africa." He went on to point out that whereas Africa has installed 14 million
lines in the century since the telephone was invented, China installed 20 million lines in 1997 alone. "This
shows," he said, "that it can be done, and we here in Africa can witness the same progress." Deputy President
Mbeki, in an inspiring closing address, took up the theme. "We have the political will," he said, "to put in
50 million lines in Africa in the next five years. We will connect every village, every school and every clinic in Africa,
if we are determined enough to do this."
A Telecom Development Symposium was also organized, in conjunction with the Forum, which brought 92
telecommunications specialists from 46 countries to AFRICA TELECOM 98 on a fellowship to discuss the principal factors that governments, regulatory bodies and
operators need to bear in mind in order to be customer and business oriented, to provide services within their own countries
and, in the case of operators, to survive in a liberalized market.
Women’s Day
Wednesday 6 May was designated as Women’s Day, and featured not only the special session on
Technology and the Status of Women but also a lunch hosted by Graca Machel, whose work in the fight to ban landmines has
made her famous. In a rare public appearance, Ms Machel, the widow of the President of Mozambique, and Nelson Mandela’s
companion, spoke passionately and movingly about the work she had performed in refugee camps. "In one camp, in Sierra
Leone," she said, "I knew that half of the children were going to die – and why? Not because there was no food
or medical supplies, but because of a failure in communications."
African Telecommunication Indicators 1998
AFRICA TELECOM 98 was also the venue for the launching
of a new ITU publication, African Telecommunication Indicators 1998, which provides analysis and statistics on every
country in Africa. At the Opening Press Conference, on Sunday 3 May, Dr Tarjanne pointed out that most Africans have never seen
or used a telephone, and live far from the affluent bustle of government and big business. "Most Africans," he said,
"are on the other side of the information gap already, and are cut off from most of the world’s information, knowledge
and wisdom." He went on to say that Africans will not gain access to telecommunications without African initiatives, taken
by individuals, at an entrepreneurial level, and encouraged Africans to find African solutions to African problems.
AFRICA TELECOM 98 Event Statistics
| Exhibitors |
443 exhibitors from 38 countries, including 18
National Pavilions. 88 South African companies exhibited. |
| Exhibition space, net |
16,567 square metres |
| Trade participants (4 to 8 May) |
16,780 from 88 countries. |
| Other participants: |
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| Ministers |
51 |
| Delegates from Administrations |
181 |
| Directors-General |
36 |
| Ambassadors |
24 |
| Chief Executive Officers |
183 |
| Forum participants, including speakers |
1,092 from 101 countries |
| Forum speakers |
295 from 81 countries |
| Accredited press |
251 journalists from 159 media and 25 countries.
165 photographers, camera crews and support staff.
98 journalists represented the international press.
153 represented the South African media. |
| ITU, Host Country and Local Staff |
322 |
| Total participants |
19,085 from 117 countries and 27
International Organizations.
People came from all 55 countries in the Africa region
Figures quoted do not include those who attended the combined trade and public day,
Saturday 9 May. |
AFRICA TELECOM 98 was the fourth regional telecommunications Exhibition and Forum for the Africa region to
be organized by the ITU as part of its programme of regional TELECOM events, following AFRICA
TELECOM 86, which was held in Nairobi, Kenya, AFRICA TELECOM 90, which was held in Harare, Zimbabwe and AFRICA TELECOM
94, which was held in Cairo, Egypt.
The AFRICA TELECOM 98
Forum papers are available from the ITU at a cost of 200 Swiss Francs. Contact hugues.depoisier@itu.int
for further details.
African Telecommunication Indicators 1998 is available from the ITU Sales Service (sales@itu.int) at a cost of 32 Swiss Francs.
Forthcoming TELECOM Events
The next TELECOM event will be TELECOM 99 + INTERACTIVE 99 which is being staged in Geneva from
10 to 17 October 1999. It is expected to be the largest and most influential telecommunications event ever held. It will be
followed by AMERICAS TELECOM 2000 and ASIA TELECOM 2000, although the dates and venues are not yet determined.
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