Summary
- Dealing with the health and economic challenges of Covid-19 has exposed the need for faster and cheaper mobile internet that can be expanded to the last mile of African populations.
- Tech activist and CEO of AppsTech Inc, Ms Rebecca Enonchong from Cameroon, re-echoed the case for "low-tech solutions such as USSD and the SMS which don't require smartphones" as well as governments' intervention to reduce the cost of broadband urgently.
Dealing with the health and economic challenges of Covid-19 has
exposed the need for faster and cheaper mobile internet that can be
expanded to the last mile of African populations.
During
a policy webinar on 'leveraging technology in assisting African
countries in the fight against Covid-19' United Nations Under
Secretary-General and executive secretary of the Economic Commission for
Africa (ECA) Ms Vera Songwe said the continent needs mass internet
access that penetrates to rural villages.
Organised in
collaboration with Ant Financial Services of the Alibaba Group, the
livestreamed event brought together leaders of the Asian tech giant,
some African ministers of technology and telecommunications, private
sector actors across the continent and digital economy activists who
agreed that technology is a common denominator in mitigating the impact
of the pandemic, restoring livelihoods and tackling similar challenges
in the future.
"It is clear that the novel coronavirus
has led to physical confinement in many parts of the world but
enterprises which leverage the power of digital and innovative
technologies continue doing business, in fact – even more business as
Ant Financial has demonstrated in offering financial solutions to 10
million additional customers in the midst of the crisis," Ms Songwe
said.
Ant Financial's representatives explained that
the organisation has so far used digital technology to help businesses
boost online trade, build intelligent networks to support agriculture
and food chain delivery, practice online medical consultations, carry
out online job search and provide contactless loans to Small and
Medium-scale Enterprises (SMEs).
"We believe that leveraging digital transformation during this
crisis will save lives and jobs especially in tourism and related
services," remarked Mr Eric Jing, executive chairperson of Ant Financial
and member of the advisory board to ECA's Digital Centre of Excellence,
adding that thanks to the power of technology, "the world will emerge
stronger, working together."
Both Mr Moustapha Diaby –
Minister of Digital Economy, Post and Telecommunications of Guinea and
Ms Cina Lawson – Minister of Digital Economy of Togo, agreed that
COVID-19 was a clarion call for Africa to prioritise digital
connectivity and governance.
Mr Diaby, for instance,
said tracing the spread of COVID-19 in order to flatten the curve in
Guinea has proved difficult in the absence of a digital identification
system.
But to use the resources at hand efficiently,
his country's government is capitalising on bulk SMS messaging and the
use of mobile telephony networks to push public service announcements
via ring tones in the major languages of the country.
Tech
activist and CEO of AppsTech Inc, Ms Rebecca Enonchong from Cameroon,
re-echoed the case for "low-tech solutions such as USSD and the SMS
which don't require smartphones" as well as governments' intervention to
reduce the cost of broadband urgently.
She regretted
that the big online traffic and hosting platforms such as Google (for
Google Play) and Apple (providing Apple Store) have curtailed the
ability for African developers to showcase groundbreaking solutions that
they have nurtured in the effort to tackle the pandemic.
In
view of these, panelists emphasised the need for African governments,
in synergy with the private sector and civil society, to collaborate on
aggregating solutions and avoiding duplication of efforts to fight
against Covid-19.
Ms Amel Saidane, President of Tunisia
Startups, explained that her country's government was already taking
that route and has sought for a North Africa regional collaborative
platform to pool together the flood of ideas and solutions from
public-private partnerships.
The dialogue ended with a
general agreement on the need to quickly set up a collaborative platform
for immediately helping businesses to sell African products on and
beyond the continent in this time of crisis.
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