ByEmeka Oparah
It is one year already since I took
on the role of Vice President, Corporate Communications & CSR at Airtel
Africa, an organization I have served for 21 years (20 of which were in
Nigeria).
While this is neither an appraisal of my work (it will be gratuitous for me so to do) nor a celebration of
the anniversary (one pastime I don’t relish), the past few days in Nairobi, Kenya, where I attended the Airtel Africa-UNICEF Convention, provided me a great opportunity and, indeed, the inspiration, to reflect on the work my colleagues and I have been doing in partnership with our friends at UNICEF since 2022 to provide children of Africa, our future leaders, with access to digital education.Let me start on a rather somber note
by regretfully acknowledging that Africa currently sits precariously on the
edge of a steep and slippery cliff with regards to educating her fast-growing
children and youth population.
The level of “learning poverty” (the
inability to read and understand a simple text by the age of 10) across the
continent is as disturbing as the statistics of out-of-school children, with
both stubbornly headed south.
The bad situation has
unfortunately been aggravated by the horrifying impact of the Covid-19
pandemic, which led to lockdowns and school closures. To put these sorry
assertions in a much clearer (or rather gloomier) perspective, a 2019 World
Bank study had sadly estimated that “48 per cent of children worldwide and 87
per cent of children in sub-Saharan Africa are ‘learning poor’.”
There couldn’t be a more
insidious threat to the future of the continent than when over 70% of the
population is educationally disadvantaged and, therefore, economically
vulnerable.
I need not here dilate on the
excellencies of education for it is already well known that perhaps it is the
most important factor in making people fit members of regularly organized
society.
Again, it is well known that
education is a leveler; it helps in bridging the divide between the rich and
poor as well as facilitating the shattering of known glass ceilings.
Regrettably, education also makes a good man (or woman) better and a bad one
worse, as we’ve seen in several instances where otherwise knowledgeable people
have deployed their knowledge in doing evil.
That said, education, at the end of
the day, offers more advantages than otherwise. Ignorance and illiteracy are
not alternatives.
Ironically, it has to be
acknowledged that Covid-19, with all its deleterious and perilous consequences,
has also opened the eyes of Africans and their leaders to not only the power of
education but also the importance and urgency of implementing digital learning
plans in their various countries.
It must be acknowledged that
literally every government in Africa has emplaced strategies, with all their
imperfections, to connect their children, teachers and schools to various
digital platforms to not only promote but also improve teaching and learning.
This is where conscientious technology companies like Airtel Africa stepped
forward as enablers to provide the needed and necessary support.
Like other socially responsible
corporate citizens, Airtel Africa, through her operations in 14 African
countries, joined hands with African leaders to bridge the yawning learning gap
occasioned by the school closures due to the Covid-19 lockdowns. On her part,
Airtel Africa zero-rated several government-approved websites and digital
learning platforms to enable teaching and learning.
This proved to be a great
palliative, but like every known palliative, it did not adequately address the
needs. For example, there were millions of children who, due to their
unavoidable circumstances of poverty and locations could not afford the devices
to access the free online educational resources, where they existed.
In other cases, it was impossible to
access the websites and platforms due to lack of internet facilities as most
parts of the continent are still low on teledensity (number of mobile telephone
users per 1000 population).
In acknowledgment of these huge and
dangerous gaps and the potential of digital connectivity, I therefore, Airtel
Africa, in pursuit of her vision to Transform the Lives of Africans, decided to
invest $57m in the provision of Access to Quality Education, which later
became one of the pillars of her Sustainability Strategy.
At the peak of the Covid-19
pandemic, Airtel Africa announced a 5-year partnership with the United Nations
Children’s Fund (UNICEF) to deliver this initiative, which in spirit and letter
aims at connecting a minimum of 1400 schools and a million children to digital
education.
In my honest opinion, there couldn’t
have been a better partnership than this, with two institutions very passionate
about and highly invested in the future of the African child. Personally, it
has been an honor and privilege leading the Airtel Africa team co-creating and
co-delivering the plans and activities in pursuit of this noble cause.
As I pen this piece, three countries
namely Kenya, Nigeria and Madagascar (in that order) have launched the
initiative. 10 other countries, Chad, Niger, DRC, Congo Brazzaville, Gabon,
Malawi, Tanzania, Zambia, Uganda and Rwanda will launch before March 31, 2023,
all factors being constant.
By launch, we mean connecting
selected government schools, especially those in remote communities, to the
internet using Airtel’s high-speed internet and providing digital devices like
tablets, laptops, desktop computers or television sets.
It also means zero-rating and
granting access to some government-approved educational websites and learning
platforms for teachers and children of not only the selected schools but the
entire communities.
In Kenya, for example, 30
schools were connected, and two platforms were zero-rated namely Elimika (for
teachers) and Kenya Education Cloud (for students), with over 600 teachers and
20,000 students already using the resources.
Not unexpectedly, it has not all
been smooth sailing. There are still some obstacles on the way.
For instance, the level of
commitment to and understanding of the importance and urgency of this
intervention are not at the same high levels across the continent.
Hence, we still have some
governments insisting that either Airtel Africa or UNICEF or both pay(s) tax
for providing free data to enable children of their countries not only to
continue learning but to also sort of catch up with their peers in other parts
of the world. In any event, it is not a lost cause, I believe, because as we
make headway in some countries, others will begin to appreciate the need to
make hay while the sun is still shinning.
Interestingly, the third pillar of
this initiative (one is connecting schools and two is zero-rating websites) is
to engage in advocacy in support of providing access to digital education.
So, between Airtel Africa and
UNICEF, we will continue to engage the various governments and educational
authorities to make them appreciate the enormity of the challenge, the urgency
of the solutions and the importance of partnering with us to empower the future
leaders of Africa.
Of course, it goes without saying
that our arms are wide open and outstretched to welcome partners, who are also
passionate about and invested in this pursuit as we are. The larger the ecosystem,
the better!
I also believe there is a whole lot
to be said about the state of educational infrastructure across the African
continent. In many of the countries, public schools are either literally
nonexistent or totally decrepit.
Some children still trek over 10
kilometers to attend school while some study under the shade of trees.
Sometimes, one wonders how a school without desks and chairs or even
blackboards could be amenable to digitization. This is where the words of the
Group CEO and Managing Director of Airtel Africa, Dr. Segun Ogunsanya,
resonates with us, the advocates and champions of this movement.
According to him, “we need to think
of new ways of learning beyond the construct of the four walls of a classroom.”
This is the future.
This is the way to go. Airtel
Africa and UNICEF are irrefragably dedicated to re-imagining education to meet
Africa’s post-Covid-19 and indeed 21st century realities. That in essence, my
dear friend, is what this whole story is all about. Thank you.
At the end of the two-day Airtel
Africa-UNICEF Convention, having looked back at what we have done, what we are
yet to do, as well as the challenges and the lessons, we leave reassured that
we are doing the right thing-at the right time.
The next four years will test our capabilities,
but we are all going back to our various countries or OPCOs (as we say in
Airtel parlance) feeling privileged to be part of such a noble objective,
indeed a sacred mandate, to empower Africa’s future leaders.
Emeka Oparah, Vice President Corporate
Communications & CSR, Airtel Africa Plc
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