Cameroon sabotages own digital economy plan with internet shutdown
Posted on March 10, 2017 by Amindeh Blaise Atabong      
Cameroon aspires to be a tech hub and “multiply by 50” jobs in ICTs.
But high costs, poor infrastructure and the internet blackout in
Silicon Mountain undermine this vision.

Bamenda northwest Cameroon is amongst the major towns without internet
for nearly two months. Credit: jbdodane.

For nearly two months now, Cameroon’s two English-speaking regions
have been living under an internet blackout. Communication by email
and social media has ground to a halt. Banks and ATMs have stopped
services. And companies that rely on the internet to do business have
suffered tremendously.

The services were cut off by the government on 17 January in response
to mass protests against perceived marginalisation and the imposition
of the French language in local schools and courts. The move was
intended to stifle communication amongst activists – and was
accompanied by mass arrests – especially in the major cities of
Bamenda, Buea and Kumba.

[Cameroon: Anglophone activists call for month of “ghost towns”
moments before arrests and internet shutdown]

Many have condemned the internet blackout, including UN Special
Rapporteur on freedom of expression David Kaye, who described the move
as “an appalling violation of [the] right to freedom of expression”.

The shutdown has also had devastating economic effects. A month into
the shutdown, over two dozen organisations including the advocacy
group Access Now wrote an open letter to complicit telecoms companies
in which they estimated that the policy had already cost over $1.39
million. And this fast-rising figure, they explained, does not even
take into account “the disruption of supply chains and of the
significant amount of remittances that Cameroonians living abroad send
to these regions”.

“By blocking access to information and services, the disruption
thwarts the exercise of human rights, including the freedoms of
expression and association, and slows economic development, seriously
harming the innovative businesses dependent on your services,” read
the letter.

Amongst the companies most affected are those located in the town of
Buea, home to the now famous “Silicon Mountain”. This small town has
been described as “Africa’s next tech hub” or the continent’s “new
home of innovation”. Buea has punched well above its weight as an
incubator for innovative African tech start-ups for the past few
years, but with no access to the internet, the usual buzz of activity
has fallen silent.

“We can’t work nor do business,” says Achia Rolence Aka, a telecoms
engineer at the tech company Skylabase. Without the internet, he says,
the websites they build cannot be updated, countless hours of work
have been wasted, and they cannot communicate with their clients.

“Worst of it is that one of our products is selling internet to the
community,” he adds. “The service has been grounded and we are feeling
the huge financial loss.”

Otto Akama, a community developer for the tech hub ActiviSpaces and
co-founder of Makonjo Media, echoes this account.

“We could travel to Douala and Yaoundé [cities in French-speaking
regions where there is internet] to get our systems up and running,
but we cannot force our users to move,” he says.

Akama says he now regrets paying rents, salaries, and bills for
services he is unable to use, and laments the vast amount of time,
energy, and resources that have been lost as a result of the two-month
shutdown.

“It is the most difficult period in my life”, he says.
Unprepared, expensive, unreliable

Aside from the violations of freedoms and hardships imposed on
Anglophone citizens, analysts suggest that the internet shutdown could
also undermine the government’s own long-term vision.

Under President Paul Biya, who has been in power since 1982, Cameroon
has made the development of information and communications technology
a strategic priority in its ambitions to become an emerging economy by
2035.

It has vowed to invest heavily in digital infrastructure and “multiply
by 50 the number of direct and indirect employment positions” in ICT
between 2010 and 2020. Meanwhile last year, Biya made headlines after
he promised one laptop for each some 500,000 university students,
hoping to drive the country’s digital economy.

However, in contrast to the government’s rhetoric, that generous
promise, amongst others, remains unfulfilled. Importing digital
equipment is still a highly complicated and costly process. And the
internet blackout in the two English-speaking regions has dealt a huge
blow to the finances, advancement and morale of the once flourishing
tech businesses in Silicon Mountain.

Moreover, according to global reports, Cameroon is floundering when it
comes to its preparedness to capitalise on digital innovation. In the
World Economic Forum’s 2016 Global Information Technology Report ,
Cameroon ranked 124th out of 139 countries in its Network Readiness
Index, placing it below the likes of The Gambia, Zimbabwe and
Mozambique. The country performed particularly poorly on measures such
as infrastructure, the availability of digital content, and
affordability.

Similar shortcomings contributed to Cameroon’s low ranking in the UN’s
2016 E-Government Survey, which examined how well countries are
“embracing innovation and utilizing ICTs to deliver services and
engage people in decision-making processes”. In the extensive report,
Cameroon was in the bottom category on most measures and ranked 155
out of 193 countries.

These findings would come as no surprise to most Cameroonians.
Electricity supply remains epileptic in most towns and absent in
others, especially in rural areas. Internet data bundles still sell at
exorbitant prices in a country where many live below the poverty line.
And mobile network service providers say they are operating the 4G LTE
network in major cities, but bandwidth remains questionable.

Despite the government’s declared intentions to make the country a
digital gateway and technological hub for the continent, its vision
looks extremely distant. And the devastating political, economic and
psychological impact of the internet shutdown in the Northwest and
Southwest, regions that would be central to the government’s digital
ambitions, looks to have put this aspiration even further out of
reach.

As civil society activist Julius Mbeng asks: “How do you expect to
achieve the digital economy plan when you shut down the internet in a
region where the country’s best techies are found?”

Amindeh Blaise Atabong is a freelance journalist based in Cameroon. He
has covered conflict, humanitarian issues and human rights abuses for
a number of international outlets. Follow him on twitter at
@AmindehBlaise.
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