
THE Government is working towards turning Zambia into an information and communications technology (ICT) hub in the region, Communication and Transport Minister Geoffrey Lungwangwa has said.
Professor Lungwangwa said during the 10th infopoverty world conference in New York, United States of America (USA), that the Government had set some objectives to meet the target.
The objectives include a commitment to improving infrastructure for ICT through the development of the optic fibre infrastructure backbone to facilitate internet broadband connectivity through the establishment of community telecentres, particularly in rural areas.
This is according to a statement released by first secretary for Press at the Zambian embassy in New York, Moses Walubita.
Prof Lungwangwa said to achieve the target, the Government intended to invest in human resource development to ensure universal access to ICT services such as internet and mobile phones, which would in turn facilitate the country’s achievements of the millennium development goals.
He said the Government’s policy was to use private investment in expanding access to this crucial catalyst for development.
Prof Lungwangwa said Zambia was committed to the development of the ICT sector and the Government was in the process of privatising Zambia Telecommunications Company (Zamtel) to ensure that other actors had access to the international gateway to facilitate affordable ICT services in Zambia.
Due to the current cost of delivery, just about one per cent of Zambians have access to the internet and 30 per cent have access to the mobile services, a situation that should improve with the privatisation of the sector because more people, particularly rural communities, will be engaged in income-generating activities resulting from increased access to ICT services.
Prof Lungwangwa said Government had adopted an ICT policy to provide a framework for the provision of these essential services to the nation and was, therefore, encouraging investment in the ICT sector, especially in the rural areas.
In a round-table discussion on how to institutionalise ICT for development in aid strategies and policies, he said the Zambian Government was determined to increase internet and mobile services from the current levels of 57 per cent to 100 per cent by 2015.
He said President Rupiah Banda who was invited by the organisers could not attend due to other national duties.
The conference was organised by OCCAM with the European Parliament, United Nations Global Alliance for ICT and Development, Infopoverty Institute at the University of Oklahoma in USA, and the Provincia di Milano in Italy.
[Times of Zambia]