July 8, 2008 -- The
findings and recommendations from a Special report recently released by
Commonwealth Telecommunications Organisation (CTO) could serve as a
clear-cut blueprint to help the Caribbean region promote and strengthen
ICT developmental partnerships between public and private sector
organisation, as well as the communities they serve.
The report, the
Commonwealth African Rural Connectivity Report, launched last month at
the Commonwealth Secretariat in London, following nine months of
intensive research involving ICT stakeholders in eighteen African
countries, reveals, among other things, that advancements in ICT
development is achievable through partnerships between development
partners, communities, funding agencies, private sector companies, and
led by policy-makers and regulators.
At the upcoming 24th annual
Telecommunications Conference and Trade Exhibition on connecting the
Caribbean in Bahamas, organized by the Caribbean Association of
National Telecommunications Organisations (CANTO) and co-hosted by the
Bahamas Telecommunications Company, the CEO of CTO, Dr. Ekwow
Spio-Garbrah, is expected to emphasise the need for stronger Public
Private Peoples Partnerships (PPPPs) and reaffirm the CTO's commitment
to helping foster those bonds to enhance both social and economic
developments on the island states.
Dr. Ekwow Spio-Garbrah will be
addressing a high-level delegation of Ministers, Regulators, Operators
and Industry Experts to generate dialogue among key stakeholders in
ensuring that the "Peoples" element plays a key role in discussions on
ICT matters in the Caribbean region.
In a brief statement in London, Dr.
Spio-Garbrah noted that, besides the PPPP concept, Caribbean countries
have longed to jointly own common telecommunications infrastructure to
link all the islands in the region, in a bid to provide more affordable
broadband access and also to promote regional and international
interactions with the United States and Europe.
However, until now,
governments in the region have had difficulty in establishing a
home-grown regional broadband infrastructure, and have been at the
mercy of privately-owned satellite and fibre-cable companies. He stated
that under an initiative of the NEPAD e-Africa Commission and funded
by the World Bank the CTO assisted 22 Eastern and Southern African
countries to design a policy and regulatory framework to enable those
countries to jointly own one fiber optic cable.
Dr. Spio-Garbrah said
through its research, consultancy and advisory services, the CTO is
positioned to help enhance such joint infrastructure ownership
initiatives by offering the necessary policy and regulatory guidelines
to Caribbean countries through partnerships with other stakeholders
from the public and private sectors.
The theme of this year's event is "CANTO-
Caribbean Unity through Connectivity" and will focus on Connecting the
Caribbean (CTC) Initiative of CANTO. CANTO 2008 will bring together
experts and policy makers from around the globe to discuss issues
impacting telecom operations in the region, among them harmonization of
regulatory policies, infrastructure sharing, ICT services, mobile
content and IPTV. The CTO also attends as an exhibitor.
About the CTO:
The Commonwealth Telecommunications Organisation (CTO) is a
London-based international development partnership between
Commonwealth and non-Commonwealth governments, business and civil
society organisations. It provides the international community with
effective means to help bridge the digital divide and achieve social
and economic development, by delivering to developing countries unique
knowledge-sharing programmes in the use of information and
communication technologies (ICT) in the increasingly converging areas
of telecommunications, IT, broadcasting and the Internet.