| Press Release |
International Telecommunication Union
For immediate release |
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ITU TELECOM AFRICA 2001 Wraps Up
African Telecoms on Track for Massive Growth
Johannesburg, 16 November 2001 — Today
was the final day of ITU TELECOM AFRICA 2001, the
fifth regional telecommunications Exhibition and Forum for the Africa region,
which was held from 12 to 16 November at the Gallagher Estate, outside
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 Sunday 11
November by the South African Minister of Communications, Dr Ivy
Matsepe-Casaburri, was hailed as a triumph by many of Africa’s leaders, who
came to help promote telecoms development on the African continent. AFRICA
2001 was notable for the commitment and tremendous spirit of optimism expressed
by government ministers, exhibitors, Forum speakers, delegates and media.
AFRICA 2001 was the
watershed event at which it was announced that mobile subscribers across the
continent now outnumber their fixed-line counterparts, and that Sub-Saharan
telephone density had finally breached the one per cent subscriber barrier
considered essential to economic growth. Projections by the ITU now forecast
that there will be more than 100 million mobile cellular subscribers in Africa
by the year 2005.
Towards the Global Information Economy
The Opening Ceremony featured keynote
presentations from Yoshio Utsumi, the ITU’s Secretary-General, Dr
Matsepe-Casaburri, and Mr Sizwe Nxasana, chief executive of Telkom, the Opening
Ceremony’s sponsor. Mr Utsumi spoke of the need to provide the world’s
people with access to modern communications services, saying "Giving
everyone access to the wealth of information available online will be beneficial
to us all and is not merely a matter of moral justice. The move from an
agricultural economy to an industrial economy generated enormous wealth, and
raised our standard of living throughout the world. The same quantum leap will
be experienced in the transition to a global information economy. Everyone must
be given access to the tools of this economy if they are to enjoy its
benefits."
The Minister announced the implementation
of the first NEPAD (New Partnership for Africa’s Development) initiative, the e-Africa
Commission, which will be responsible for developing e-strategies and
projects at continental level, as well as managing the structured development of
the ICT sector. The President of Mali, President Alpha Oumar Konare, will be the
chairman of the e-Africa Commission. The e-schools project will be the first
project of the Commission and is aimed at ensuring that every high school
student in Africa is e-literate within the next five years.
Speaking about the rapid and far-reaching
transformation currently taking place in South Africa, Mr Nxasana drew attention
to the huge task facing Telkom in bringing telecommunications services to every
corner of the country, in addition to providing state-of-the-art services to the
commercial firms relying on Telkom for their own competitive advantages.
An Exhibition and a Forum
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 network
expansion, improved access as well as their human development goals.
The Exhibition at AFRICA
2001 attracted 15,000 telecommunications professionals and many organizations
whose role is to bring ICT to communities and who wanted to see what was on the
offer to facilitate this role cost-effectively. They came to see the latest
technology on display from more than 200 exhibitors from the telecommunications,
information technology and audio-visual entertainment fields. Industry leaders
at the highest level, from ambassadors and nearly 40 government ministers, to
the CEOs of the front-ranked market players, participated, along with some of
the most respected industry analysts and commentators.
The Opening Session of the Forum, held on
Monday 12 November, featured speeches on Defining the Digital Divide by Yoshio
Utsumi and Ivy Matsepe-Casaburri, and was chaired by The Hon. DN Magang, former
Minister of Communications and MP in the Botswana parliament.
The Forum at AFRICA 2001
was especially well attended, with standing room only available at some
sessions. Altogether nearly 2,000 people attended the Forum (including VIPs,
press, etc.), which encompassed a Policy and Development Summit, an
Infrastructure and Applications Summit, and a Youth Forum.
A Telecom Development Symposium was also
organized, in conjunction with the Forum, which brought 73 telecommunications
specialists from 40 countries to AFRICA 2001 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.
Speaking at the Opening Press Conference,
Dr Matsepe-Casaburri applauded the ITU for having included the Youth Forum in
the AFRICA 2001 programme, allowing young people of university
age from all over Africa to deliberate on how technology can be used to advance
their contribution to the reconstruction and development of the continent. The
scholarships were awarded to delegates selected by a competition based on their
ideas about the impact of Information and Communications Technologies on the
future of their countries and the role of the youth. It is hoped that they will
comprise a corps of future leaders in the ICT field.
Speaking at an Imbizo (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 of the African continent) in honour of the African Youth at the
Presidential Guesthouse in Pretoria on 15 November, President Thabo Mbeki urged
the participants not just to speak, but to act. "Some people say I am a
foolish President because I surf the net," he said. "But I would
encourage all of you young people to make use of the technology available to you
today, to surf the net, and to make yourselves totally computer literate."
Encouraging direct action, he continued, "If this technology is not
available to you, ask for it — in your village or town, wherever you are in
Africa. And make sure you get it."
A Spirit of Cooperation
During the week of AFRICA
2001, non-exclusive Memoranda of Understanding (MoU) were signed by the ITU’s
Secretary-General with Alcatel and Siemens within the framework of its Centres
of Excellence (CoE) Initiative. These two European manufacturers will make an
in-kind contribution in equipment and capacity building to manage and administer
networks in Africa, Arab States, Latin America and the Caribbean. A third MoU
was also signed between the ITU and Cable & Wireless at the event, to
commemorate the tenth anniversary of the ITU/C&W Training Scheme. Under the
agreement the UK operator will extend remote learning opportunities to
telecommunication professionals in LDCs, by providing scholarships through the
Global Telecommunication University (GTU), the ITU's flagship programme for
distance learning.
At AFRICA 2001 the ITU also
initiated a high-impact humanitarian project involving the UNHCR (United Nations
High Commission for Refugees) and UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific
& Cultural Organization) to establish a network of three multi-purpose
community telecentres in and around refugee camps along the north-western border
of Tanzania. Volunteers in Technical Assistance (VITA) signed a cooperation
agreement with the ITU to participate in the venture, and WorldSpace Corporation
said it will sign a similar agreement shortly, and announced the donation of
equipment to the project. Other UN organizations are expected to join the
partnership.
The Forum was closed on Friday 16 November
by ITU Secretary-General, Yoshio Utsumi, South Africa's President Thabo Mbeki,
ITU Deputy Secretary-General Roberto Blois, Dr Ivy Matsepe-Casaburri and
Hamadoun Touré, Director of the ITU’s Telecommunication Development Bureau
(BDT).
African Telecommunication Indicators 2001
AFRICA 2001 was also the
venue for the launching of a new ITU publication, African Telecommunication
Indicators 2001, which provides analysis and statistics on every country in
Africa. At the Opening Press Conference on Sunday 11 November, Mr Utsumi
described the huge advances that had been made in telecoms development in Africa
in the past three year, and suggested that it was time to put some old myths to
rest. "No longer are there more telephones in Tokyo than in Africa,"
he said, "In fact there are half as many fixed-lines and significantly
fewer cellular subscribers in Tokyo than across Africa. No longer is the
telephone density of sub-Saharan African subscribers trapped below the one per
cent threshold considered essential to economic growth and development — in
the millennium year telephone density grew from 0.9 per cent to 1.2 per cent in
sub-Saharan Africa. And no longer is Africa stifled by a lack of fair regulation
and free competition — 36 new operators launched mobile services in Africa in
the 18 months to June this year, and well over half of the countries across the
continent have now established an independent regulator."
AFRICA 2001 was the fifth
regional telecommunications Exhibition and Forum for the Africa region to be
organized by the ITU as part of its programme of regional ITU TELECOM
events, following AFRICA TELECOM 86, which was
held in Nairobi, Kenya, AFRICA TELECOM 90, which
was held in Harare, Zimbabwe, AFRICA TELECOM 94,
which was held in Cairo, Egypt, and AFRICA TELECOM
98, which was held in Johannesburg, South Africa.
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Forthcoming ITU TELECOM
Events
Next year the ITU will
be organizing its sixth regional ITU TELECOM
event for the Asia-Pacific region, ASIA 2002. Following the
enormously successful ASIA 2000 event, ASIA 2002 will
also be hosted by the Government of the People’s Republic of China
in Hong Kong SAR, and will for the second time be taking place at
the Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre (HKCEC). The event
will be held from Monday 2 to Saturday 7 December 2002, and is
expected to draw more than 50,000 attendees.
ITU TELECOM AMERICAS 2003, the fifth international
telecommunications exhibition and forum for the Americas region,
will be hosted by the Government of the Argentine Republic and held
in Buenos Aires, from Tuesday 25 to Friday 28 February 2003, at La
Rural. A VIP and Press Day will be held on Monday 24 February, which
will feature an Opening Ceremony, a VIP Tour of the Exhibition and a
Welcome Reception.
Completing the current four
year cycle will be the Olympics of telecommunications events, ITU TELECOM
WORLD 2003, which will build on the strengths of the
giant TELECOM 99 + INTERACTIVE 99
event which took place in Geneva in October 1999. WORLD
2003 will take place at the newly expanded Palexpo venue in Geneva
from 12 to 18 October 2003.
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The AFRICA 2001 Forum
papers will be available at the beginning of January 2002 on CD-Rom from the
ITU at a cost of 200 Swiss Francs. Contact hugues.depoisier@itu.int
for further details.
African Telecommunication Indicators 2001 is
available from the ITU Sales Service (sales@itu.int)
at a cost of 38 Swiss Francs.
ITU TELECOM AFRICA
2001 Event Statistics1
| EXHIBITORS |
|
Exhibitors |
236
exhibitors from 28 countries, including 7 National
Pavilions. 75 South African companies exhibited. |
|
Exhibition space, net |
8,314.50
square metres |
|
Total Trade
participants (12
to 15 November) |
13,107
from 95 countries. |
|
VIPs |
|
Ministers / Ministerial
Representatives |
40 |
|
Directors-General |
34 |
|
Ambassadors |
55 |
|
Delegates from
Administrations |
11 |
|
Chief Executive Officers |
110 |
|
Other VIPs |
356 |
|
Total VIPs |
606 |
|
FORUM |
|
Forum speakers |
166 from 42 countries |
|
Youth Forum & TDS
speakers |
68 |
|
Youth Forum Participants |
85 from 48 countries |
|
TDS sponsored delegates |
73 from 40 countries |
|
Total
Forum participants including
speakers
(not including VIPs and Press) |
1,060
from more than 70 countries |
|
PRESS |
|
Total Accredited press |
191
journalists from 123 media and 18 countries.
77 photographers, camera crews and support staff.
73 journalists represented the international press.
118 represented the South African media. |
|
OTHER
PARTICIPANTS |
|
Other participants |
138 |
|
TOTAL
PARTICIPANTS |
|
15,102
from more than 100 countries.
People came from all 56 countries in the Africa region |
For further information on ITU TELECOM,
please contact:
Piers Letcher
Press and Public Relations Officer, ITU
TELECOM
Tel: +41 22 730 6602 / Fax: +41 22 730 6444
E-mail: piers.letcher@itu.int
| 1 |
All figures correct as of close
of business on 15 November 2001. Figures for Friday, 16 November
2001, were not available at the time of publication of this press
release. |
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