The great African internet robbery
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/africa/newsid_1931000/1931120.stm

Africa is being ripped off - to the tune of some $500m a year - simply
for hooking up to the World Wide Web, say Kenyan internet company
chiefs.

"America Online doesn't spend one single cent in sending emails to
Africa", ISP Chairman Richard Bell

And this extra cost is partly to blame for slowing the spread of the
internet in Africa and helping sustain the digital divide, they contend.

According to Kenya's Internet Service Providers (ISP) Association, the
continent is being forced by Western companies to pay the full cost of
connecting to worldwide networks.

Chairman Richard Bell says this has led to the unfair exploitation of
the continent's young internet industry.

He says the problem is that International Telecommunications Union
regulations - which ensures the costs of telephone calls between Africa
and the West are split 50:50 - are not being enforced with regard to the
internet.

"British Telecom doesn't spend one single penny... America Online
doesn't spend one single cent in sending emails to Africa."

All 54 countries in Africa are now connected <photo>

The total cost of any email sent or received by an African internet user
is borne entirely by African ISPs, Mr Bell said on the BBC African
service programme Talkabout Africa.

Despite the relatively high cost of using the internet in Africa, growth
has been rapid in recent years.

All 54 countries are now hooked up to the internet, and there an
estimated four million subscribers across the continent .

In Kenya alone, there are more than 100,000 subscribers and some 250
cyber cafes across the country.

Bandwidth

Mr Bell said that their association had calculated that the current and
latent demand for bandwidth in Africa cost about $1bn per year.

Internet entrepreneurs have sprung up across Africa

And he said that if data network operators in the West were forced to
adhere to the same regulations as voice operators then they would have
to pay half the cost.

"The only reason this doesn't happen at the moment is that European and
North American operators are not prepared to pay their share of the
costs."

"This is exploitation... These networks are raping Africa of half a
billion dollars a year."

He said that the G8 group of leading nations were responsible for this
inequitable trade and at some point had to act to halt it, if they were
serious about trying to bridge the digital divide.

And he said that they as an association now planned to push for this
change.

Action

They are also calling on African countries to take action by getting
together to reduce their costs.

A proposal called the Halfway Proposition urges fellow African countries
to create national exchanges and then interconnected regional ones - as
has occured in other parts of the developing world.

This would at least mean that the communications costs for intra-African
emails stay within Africa - rather than the West benefiting from the
cost of an email.

Mike Jenson, who runs the Africa Interconnectivity web site and is
surveying the current utilisation of broadband on the continent, agrees
that this could make a difference.

"No one really knows how much intra-African traffic there is, but it's
sure to grow and become significant if it isn't already," he told BBC
News Online.

"If only 5% is intra-regional, it would add up to a sizeable amount," he
said.

===============================================
Ashish Kotamkar ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Mithi Software Technologies Pvt. Ltd.
302, Mayfair Court,
Dr. Pai Marg, Baner Road,
Pune 411 045. India.
Tel: +91-20-729 3259/58
Fax: +91-20-729 3260
Web: http://www.mithi.com
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