Emma Okonji
The Executive Vice Chairman of NCC,
Prof. Umar Garba Danbatta has revealed that over 40 million Nigerians
are still deprived of internet access, despite the fast pace of internet
adoption in the country.
Danbatta, who made the disclosure this
week while addressing delegates at this year’s International
Telecoms
Union (ITU) annual regional capacity building workshop, which was hosted
by Nigeria in Abuja, attributed the lack of internet access to the rise
in the country’s access gap, which he said, had reached 200 recently.
The ITU is the specialised agency of the United Nations responsible for telecoms industry regulation.
Disturbed by the number of Nigerians
that lacked access to the internet, Danbatta called on the ITU to
examine existing African policies and change policies that pertain to
internet governance, with a view to making them more impactful for
Nigerians and Africans.
While presenting the status of Nigeria’s
internet penetration, Danbatta told the ITU delegates that Nigeria
still has 200 access gaps that are currently depriving close to 40
million people, access to internet and further explained that the
country needed to put certain policies in place to address internet
governance.
“We need to look at what we can do to
fast track blocking of these access gaps because unless and until we do
so, many of our citizens will continue to live without access to the
internet especially the right kind of internet connectivity, which is
the high speed internet that is mostly facilitated by broadband
infrastructure,” Danbatta said.
He urged the ITU delegates to make
important suggestions on what could be done to change African enabling
policies and institutions, with a view to further deepen internet
penetration in Africa and Nigeria
Nigeria recorded 102.8 million mobile data subscriptions as at June this year, representing the level of internet penetration in the country.
Nigeria recorded 102.8 million mobile data subscriptions as at June this year, representing the level of internet penetration in the country.
MTN takes the lead with 38.9 million
active mobile internet subscriptions. It is closely followed by Airtel
with 26.7 million active internet subscribers and Globacom 26.6 million
internet users. Also, 9mobile has 10.6 million internet subscribers.
Also speaking at the forum, the
representative of ITU Regional Director for Africa, Marcelino Tayob,
said: “Information and Communications Technology (ICT) and internet in
particular have changed the way we live, work, study and entertain
ourselves. The internet is present practically in all sectors of the
economy and the society.”
According to Tayob, the forum is an annual event which ITU office for Africa organises every year with the objective of providing a platform to African countries to share experiences, strengthen their knowledge and raise awareness on matters that concern the theme selected for the year.
According to Tayob, the forum is an annual event which ITU office for Africa organises every year with the objective of providing a platform to African countries to share experiences, strengthen their knowledge and raise awareness on matters that concern the theme selected for the year.
Internet governance, he stressed,
remained one of the priorities to be addressed by the ITU capacity
building programme with focus on developing at least the developing
countries, which is in line with the recommendation of global capacity
building held in Nairobi 2016.
The Administrator, Digital Bridge
Institute (DBI), Dr. Ike Adinde, highlighted that the workshop was a
capacity building event organised under the auspices of the ITU with DBI
as co-host, which seeks to explore how Africa can benefit from Internet
Governance.
“Today the internet and communication
technology are driving major developments as major anchors of social
development and Africa must be part of this development,” Adinde said,
adding that Digital Bridge Institute is Nigeria’s foremost ICT institute
established by NCC for the purpose of building capacity in the ICT
space and it has done very well in training and capacity building in the
last decade.
The whole idea of the workshop, Dambatta
further said, revolved around making sure there is internet
connectivity in equitable distribution across Nigeria’s 774 Local
Governments Areas with a population close to 200 million.
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