| By
Makane Faye, 20 April 2006
On behalf of member
states and stakeholders, ECA presented over 80 project proposals
to experts ahead of a meeting of African ICT ministers in
Egypt .
The presentation
focused on implementation of the African Regional Action Plan
on the Knowledge Economy (ARAPKE) which has been adopted by
the African Union as Africa 's roadmap on ICT for development
over the next 10 years.
ECA's presentation
listed 89 project proposals at a cost of over 8 million euros.
ECA proposed convening a Resource Mobilization Conference
to discuss funding and implementation of the proposals and
made recommendations on follow up and evaluation mechanisms.
At the opening
of the ministerial conference, various speakers congratulated
ECA for its role in developing National Information and Communication
Infrastructure (NICI) plans and in coordinating Africa's participation
in the World Summit on the Information Society in Tunis where
the ARAPKE was adopted.
Egypt 's Minister
of Communication and Information Technology Dr Tarek Kamel
said ECA had “spared no effort in coordinating African
views and positions towards different issues including those
debated within the WSIS”.
His Ghanaian counterpart
Albert Kan-Dapaah commended ECA for mobilizing the continent
through the African Information Society Initiative (AISI),
which in his view “was the first major initiative to
give effect to the concept of ICT for Development as well
as the key leadership role expected from Ministers to spearhead
the implementation in our respective countries”.
This event was
held as a result of the January 2006 Khartoum Summit which
called on the African Union Commission to organize the first
conference of African ministers responsible for ICTs .
The meeting concluded
by issuing a declaration which recommended institutionalising
the Conference of ICT Ministers as the policymaking and overall
governance body for ICT in the framework of the African Union.
The meeting also adopted the outline of a proposed structure
as the basis for the Conference and its related committees.
Forty-two countries
participated in the conference, including 15 ministers from
Gambia , Zimbabwe , Ethiopia , Ghana , Guinea , Tunisia ,
Senegal , Sudan , Uganda , Kenya , Burundi , Nigeria , Lesotho
, South Africa and Mauritania .
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