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Private Sector In Increased Role In Government ICT Expansion, Says IDC

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Governments across the Middle East and Africa (MEA) are increasingly looking to utilize public-private partnerships (PPPs) in order to gain efficiencies, mobilize additional resources, and extend services to their citizens, residents, and visitors, according to the latest observations from International Data Corporation (IDC), the premier global market intelligence and advisory firm for the information technology and telecommunications markets.

 

Such partnerships are proving popular not only in the traditional fields of mega-infrastructure projects such as roads and mass transit systems, but also as an alternate means of expanding and enhancing the delivery of services, modernizing education and healthcare systems, and increasing the availability and diffusion of ICT, without necessarily having to directly allocate capital expenditure to such initiatives. Supporting this claim of surging popularity, the World Bank’s Private Participation in Infrastructure database indicates that, while the MEA region accounted for approximately 6% (or $47.84 billion) of global investment on PPP infrastructure projects between 1990–2000, that share grew to approximately 15% (or $126.50 billion) in the period between 2001 and 2008.

 

“Across the region, various PPP initiatives are being undertaken by private ICT players, with the support of the respective governments, to build infrastructure and deliver services across the judiciary, transportation, education, and healthcare sectors,” says Mukesh Chulani, senior research analyst the Middle East, Africa, and Turkey at IDC Government Insights. “There are various highly innovative information and communication technologies embedded within PPP initiatives regionally, ranging from a traffic incident automation solution in South Africa to a national training program aimed at developing basic ICT skills among high school students in Turkey.”

 

Coming from a backdrop where public capital was the sole source of funding for social amenities and infrastructure, and where governments designed, built, maintained, and operated various entities, there are now successful and innovative PPP examples within the MEA region that have had a demonstrable impact while shifting more risk to the private sector. Indeed, in some cases, technology solutions originating in the Middle East and Africa have proved so successful that they have subsequently been deployed to other projects across the globe.

 

In IDC Government Insights’ report, ‘Public-Private Partnerships: Examples of Successful Technology Collaboration in the Middle East, Turkey, and Africa’, Mr. Chulani highlights the case of the ‘SMS for Life‘ project in Tanzania, which is an ongoing collaboration to improve the management of anti-malarial medication inventory levels that is led by Novartis in conjunction with IBM, Vodafone, the Roll Back Malaria Partnership, and the Tanzanaian government’s National Malaria Control Programme.

 

Launched in September 2009, the SMS for Life project was first implemented as a pilot in three rural districts in Tanzania, covering 129 health facilities and a total population of approximately 1.2 million people. Over a period of five months, the system effectively provided information on the inventory levels of anti-malarial treatments, leading to a more efficient supply chain and a 300% improvement in the availability of such medication, greatly reducing the number of deaths from malaria.

 

So successful was the pilot that the project is now being rolled out nationwide to cover 5,000 health facilities and a population of more than 40 million people, while Kenya and Ghana are set to implement trials of their own based on the same technology.

 

“Given the ease of deployment and wide-ranging applicability of the SMS for Life project, it would make sense to replicate such a PPP initiative elsewhere, extending its reach to improve the visibility of medication inventory levels for other disease areas as well,” says Chulani. “However, despite the clear progress that is being made across the Middle East and Africa, the region’s governments have yet fully to harness the true potential of PPPs. More work needs to be done to educate internal stakeholders, develop and administer effective policies, and assess the capabilities of existing public sector institutions in order to aid the implementation and management of successful PPPs.”

[Reminder] Tekedia Broad Industrial Average (TBIA) Of Nigerian Stock Exchange Debuts Monday

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A detailed introduction is here. This is a reminder to check on Monday for the TBIA index. We hope you will like what we have done. It will be updated daily and will provide an indication of the Nigerian Stock Exchange movement. We will publish the White Paper on Monday also.

 

Tekedia Broad Industrial Average (TBIA)– we have created a stock market index that mirrors the Dow Jones Industrial Average to give a daily assessment of Nigerian stock exchange. This composite includes 20 stocks across different sectors of the stock exchange and we have weighted them by stock price. Automation of the process so that it will show as map is being done. Starting number for the TBIA is 5,000. As the average does well, it will move up, and when it lags, it goes down.

 

Phone Emission – Association of Licensed Telecoms Operators of Nigeria (ALTON) Must Not Confuse Nigerians

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The  World Health Organisation (WHO) few months ago stated that mobile phones radiations could POSSIBLY cause cancer. Recently, the Association of Licensed Telecoms Operators of Nigeria (ALTON) made a statement assuring  Nigerians that there is no cause for cause for alarm.

 

The boss of the organization, Gbenga Adebayo, rightly noted that the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) study simply called for further inquiry to provide more reassurance and there were no grounds for Nigerians to panic. He said that though WHO has declared that the emissions from the Electromagnetic Frequency (EMF) spectrum is “possibly carcinogenic” and ‘may cause cancer, ALTON as a way of setting the record straight, reassures all concerned of the safety of EMF signals, reports BusinessDay.

 

That is the problem. Mr Adebayo, this is not politics. This is hard science. How can you reassure Nigerians. How? Did you run a lab test to find out there was no cause-effect relationship? How can you explain out hard science with a comment.

 

EMF is emitted by mobile phones and other mobile devices and systems. If the word EMF is too technical, observe what happens when your phone rings near your TV sets. We all know that  when our phones ring, the TV sets flicker (signals go blur or even disappear sometimes). That it can happen to TV sets and radio could imply we are also getting them. The issue is that the quantity we get is very small. But is that good for a baby in the womb of the mom? Those signals can rewire some neural developments in their brains since the human sensory system works with synapses and neurons and it basically an electrical system. In electrical engineering, we call it interference. If the body’s system collides with the EMF from phone, are we safe? Or better, is a baby cool with such doses?

 

ALTON should commission a study in UNTH or LUTH or one of the universities in the nation and come up with their own fact based explanations. When they do that, they can reassure Nigeriasn. Right now, many people are taking precautions owing to WHO’s report and he cannot be confident on something he has no facts. This is not a Nigerian thing where people never care for facts. Let him just say “I do not know”. There is nothing wrong with that than reassuring on a potential health issue he has no data to back his comments.

 

The WHO will finish their further studies. Until then, we do not know. And no one will reassure you because we do not know. That is how science works. If ALTON wants to reassure Nigerians, then let them show us the journal where they have published their facts and we will gladly read.

 

Mobile Marketing Association (MMA) – Nigeria Needs A Local Chapter

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The Mobile Marketing Association (MMA) is a global group that strives to stimulate the growth of mobile marketing and its technologies. MMA members are diverse and include agencies, advertisers, hand held device manufacturers, carriers and operators, retailers, software providers and service providers as well as companies focused on marketing via mobile devices.

 

The MMA is dedicated to:

 

  • Providing an industry forum to meet, discuss, plan and work co-operatively to resolve key industry issues
  • Bring together industry-wide, global and regional work groups that focus on industry initiatives
  • Providing representation for the mobile marketing industry to major legislative bodies worldwide
  • Fuelling peer to peer interaction through seminars, conferences and events.
  • Develop measurement metrics for ad delivery and consumer response (6) Develop open and compatible mobile marketing technical and creative standards
  • Serve as the key advocate on behalf of the mobile marketing industry.

 

The MMA’s primary focus is on consumer protection and privacy, given the importance of consumer satisfaction in maintaining a sustainable industry and promoting growth. They therefore strive to align their members and industry stakeholders with consumer needs to ensure a positive mobile experience. The industry must monitor and enforce consumer protection and privacy to ensure the success and integrity of the mobile content business.

 

Nigeria does not have a local chapter. The two local chapters in Africa are:

East Africa (Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda)
South Africa

Visafone Partners With Panasonic on Sales Promotion – Buy Panasonic TV, Get Free Handset

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Visafone has noticed what many have seen already that survival in the Nigeria’s telecommunication industry will involve many value added services that go beyond the sale of prepaid minutes, directly or indirectly. Recently, it announced that it was partnering with Panasonic on a sales promotion.

 

In this three month promotion, customers will get a brand new   ZTE S100 FM handsets when they  purchase Panasonic 32” TV model 32C22. The customers will also enjoy a monthly airtime worth N600 for 3 months.

 

The MD of Visafone, Sailesh Iyer, noted that the deal follows the company’s tradition of delivery value to customers. The partnership with Panasonic could offer  a new revenue opportunity for Visafone which desperately needs it in its small CDMA network.

 

“Visafone is a network of choice and has consistently been on the vanguard of providing excellent and qualitative services to its teeming subscribers across the country, aimed at making communication faster and easier,” Iyer further said.

 

His counterpart, Mr. Suraj Rupani, Promoter Panaserv Nig Ltd noted that “Panasonic, in its continued efforts to reach all segments of the Nigerian society, seizes this opportunity of co-promotion with Visafone.”