Category: Infotech

  • Ericsson introduces multi-lingual live platform

    Ericsson introduces multi-lingual live platform

    Ericsson has unveiled its real-time platform that supports live captioning in various languages for broadcasters using speech-to-text, newsroom integration, and rapid offline content preparation.

    The live platform makes its IBC debut this year, and is a key part of Ericsson’s broadcast and media services portfolio following the acquisition of leading media services company Red Bee Media in July.

    The enterprise-level, schedule-driven software platform, which was developed in-house, uses the best possible speech recognition and stenography technologies to power Ericsson’s live captioning services. It allows multiple captioners to prepare and deliver real-time services for clients while maximising re-use of the caption data after it has been broadcast – for example, by helping to power content discovery and enrich archive search.

    The platform is being used to deliver live captioning services for major broadcast clients, including the BBC.

    On the platform, Head, Broadcast & Publication Operation, BBC Television, Simon Smith, said: “The drive for technical innovation and operational efficiency has underpinned Ericsson’s approach to the design and development of this platform from the outset. They have delivered a system that is uniquely tailored to meeting our demanding requirements. We are already seeing a step change in live subtitling accuracy as a result of using this platform, and we view its ongoing development as a vital tool in delivering ever-greater access to live programs for the BBC’s deaf and hard-of-hearing viewers.”

  • Nokia devises account for 7m smartphones, says MTN

    Nokia devises account for 7m smartphones, says MTN

    MTN, Usman Idris of the eight million 3G devices on the network of the  seven million are Nokia devices, its Manager, Data and Device, Usman Idris has said.

    He said:  79 per cent of the devices constitute cash cow for the telco as the fortunes of voice calls diminish paving way for data.

    Speaking during the launch of Lmia 930 in Lagos, Idris said the telco was exploring the option of expanding its channel links to drive revenue for the firm as earnings from voice calls continue to dip.

    He said the partnership the telco had with Microsoft Mobile Devices had worked very well as it has been a win-win situation for both parties, adding that there is more room for partnership.

    According to him, MTN will do more in the open channel space by making its presence felt in Slot, Otigba Market, Ikeja and other such open channels to get closer to the customers.

    Also Managing Director, Microsoft Mobile Devices & Services, Nick Imudia, said the firm partnered with MTN and Mansard Insurance to underscore the premium placed on providing exciting services to customers all the time in the country.

    He said it was not by accident that the three big Ms (Microsoft, MTN and Mansard) were coming together to form a formidable alliance all in the interest of the customers.

    According to him, while MTN will provide data bundle for the new device, Mansard will take care of the insurance aspect which is also covered by Microsoft Devices’ 12 months warranty.

    He said the device was beautifully crafted and designed with the customer’s ways pf life at the back of the mind of the firm. According to him,  it is a machine that combines work with play.

  • CWG’s revenue slumps on competition, others

    CWG’s revenue slumps on competition, others

    • Refocuses business

    Indigenous tech firm, Computer Warehouse Group (CWG Plc), has blamed the decline in its revenue on continued decline in margins on traditional information technology (IT) infrastructure business due to commoditisation, competitive pressures, as well as viable alternatives in the cloud computing frontier.

    The firm has, therefore, mapped out strategies to change the focus of the business to return it to profitability for the benefit of its shareholders.

    Its Financial Controller, Remi Adeloye, lamented that the firm’s half year revenue of N3.3billion is 16 per cent below N9.9billion of its corresponding previous year while its gross profit of N1.6billion is 23 per cent below the N2.1billion achieved within the corresponding year under review.

    He said:  “CWG’s 2014 first half of the year revenue of N8.3billion is 16 per cent below 2013 N9.9billion, while gross profit N1.6billion is 23 per cent below 2013 N2.1billion. The lower (first half) H1 revenue is a reflection of the continued decline in margins on traditional IT infrastructure business due to commoditisation and competitive pressures, as well as viable alternatives in the cloud computing frontier.

    He, however, said in spite of these challenges, the Group’s financial position remained firm buoyed by adequate liquidity as its leverage and efficiency ratio improved to 1.5 as against 1.4 of the corresponding period under review last year.

    “The financial position of the Group remains strong with adequate liquidity, leverage and efficiency ratios. H1 2014 current ratio improved to 1.5 as against H1 2013 which was 1.4 signifying strong liquidity and adequacy of working capital to meet transactional needs. Also, CWG’s leverage debt to equity ratio remains low at nine per cent as against 10 per cent in 2013,” Adeloye said.

    Its Group Chief Executive Officer, Austin Okere, said a shift in strategy has become imperative in view of the development.

    He said:  “We crafted the plan code named CWG2.0 in 2010, realising back then the pervasiveness of cloud computing, and the major enablement for this in our region following the increase in broadband access from 0.65terabytes (Tb) to a combined capacity of 9Tbits per second. We were very clear that while our tremendous growth over the years had been propelled by our traditional businesses in hardware and software sales and support, and VSAT bandwidth vending, these represented mature and declining margin businesses, the import of which have been evident in our recent financial statements.”

    He said the uptake of firm’s new cloud products not only in Nigeria, Ghana, Cameroon and Uganda proved that its emerging business model of providing cloud services on a subscription basis is scalable, repeatable, transferable, relatively more sustainable and profitable.

    Okere added: “We consider the refocusing of our business into a subscription based model as a dual advantage play. In addition to being a more sustaining strategy, it maximises our social impact investing on the economy of Africa and helps to create jobs by empowering entrepreneurs in the countries of our operation.”

  • Telcos urge NCC to create spectrum market

    Telcos urge NCC to create spectrum market

    elecoms firms have urged the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) to create a spectrum market where operators could buy and sell the scarce airwaves resource.

    Its umbrella body, the Association of Telecoms Companies of Nigeria (ATCON), argued that since it is the practice in other climes, the NCC should look into the option as it will assist the agency in its pursuit of universal access goal.

    Its President, Lanre Ajayi, said before the regulator puts a cap on  the auctioning of spectrum in the 2.6 gigahertz (GHz) band or allow a single operator have it all, it should first consider giving freedom to operators to have a spectrum market.

    According to him, the matter has been agitating the minds of operators for a long time as the licensing guidelines of the regulator constrained this from happening.

    He said: “Before we can put in a cap or allow someone to have everything, there is one important thing that we will need to do. There is something that has been missing in the industry for a while that people are already asking for and I think the NCC should start thinking about. It is something like a spectrum market. If I have a spectrum today and I buy based on certain business plan and for some strange reason, my plans are not working as I already scheduled, I may choose to sell my spectrum to someone else.

    “Today, that is not possible by the provision of licence document. People are now asking for such leverage, for such market to be created, the spectrum market where I should be able to sell my spectrum to an operator that is ready to deploy immediately with it. If I have a national spectrum and I will be able to deploy to Lagos, Abuja , Port Harcourt and my spectrum covers Sokoto, Bornu, and there is someone in Bornu State that is willing to use this spectrum to deploy service, why can’t  I sell that my spectrum to him?

    “I could sell to someone in Bornu even at a premium. But now you have constrained the operators through the licence regulation that they cannot do that. I think that constraint should be removed; a spectrum market should be created.

    “This is happening in some markets or other countries. So, if that is available, then we may allow an operator o buy the whole 2.6GHz spectrum with the hope that if he is not able to deploy today, he could sell it some other time. If that is not in place, there will certainly not be (people holding licences without deploying them to use for a long time).

    Director, Spectrum Administration at NCC, Austin Nwaulune, promised that the regulator would look at the “spectrum trading option” being proposed by ATCON, adding that speculative buying of spectrum licences is one of the things that holding back the industry.

    “ATCON is advocating spectrum trading. That is something different. We are also looking at that too.  In Nigeria, we are very good at speculation and that has hindered it so far. So, until we determine how we do it, .it is not a way yet but we are looking at all the options,” Nwaulume said.

  • Look before leaping

    Look before leaping

    Phones are all over the place now, unlike in the past. With subscriber base close to 130 million, teledensity is over 90 per cent–thanks to the liberalisation of the telecoms sector. Smartphones are becoming affordable; the internet remains unregulated with open source applications.  But downloading free applications can compromise a phone user’s security and his account details, LUCAS AJANAKU reports.

    When he spoke at a cybersecurity summit organised by the Office of the National Security Adviser (ONSA) in conjunction with the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) in Lagos, everybody listened.

    The Chief Information Officer (CIO), Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Taiwo Longe, said last year that money deposit banks (MDBs) lost N140billion to internet fraudsters.

    According to the apex bank, between  2000 and last year, a whopping N159billion was stolen from the MDBs across the country through electronic fraud. These funds are depositors’ money which the banks so often do not make any noise to panic withdrawals.

    Information Technology (IT) security experts have linked some of these internet frauds to the download of free applications (apps) from the internet onto either the smartphones or personal computers (PCs). It is believed that weaknesses in the applications people download, compounded further with basic human error  could result in the installation of spyware or malware on smartphones and PCs.

    Experts argue that this could allow hackers to gain access to the smartphone’s vital information, such as contact list, phone calls, global positioning system (GPS) location and bank information without the user realising it.

    This is because as businesses increasingly rely on various cloud services, the emergence of attacks targeting endpoints, mobile devices and credentials as means to gaining access to corporate or personal clouds will be on the rise.

    According to a report on RT.com, the Russian English language news channel, security firm Group-IB has warned that more than 541,000 smartphones running on Android in Russia, Europe and the United States (U.S.) were infected with malware which grants cybercrooks unfettered  access to people’s mobile devices.

    Yet, another report, this time from the U.S, said many mobile banking apps, including those of major financial institutions, contain configuration and design weaknesses that makes them vulnerable to attacks.

    According to reports on DarkReading.com, an online security site, experts from security firm Praetorian tested 275 Apple iOS- and Android-based mobile banking apps from 50 major financial institutions, 50 large regional banks, and 50 large U.S. credit unions. Overall, they found that eight out of 10 apps were improperly configured and not built using best practice software development.

    Moneyweb, online platform, said among the big-name banks whose mobile apps the security firm tested were Bank of America, Citigroup, Wells Fargo, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Capital One Financial, and Suntrust Banks. Praetorian did not disclose how each bank’s apps fared in the tests.

    The security weaknesses identified in the mobile banking apps are not pure software vulnerabilities, says Nathan Sportsman, founder and CEO of Praetorian. “These aren’t business-logic or application-specific issues. They are weaknesses across the mobile apps – things developers should be doing but are not,” he said.

    A research team from IBM uncovered a vulnerability that will affect apps built on a popular platform for application development called Cordova, according to SecurityIntelligence.com.

    The researchers found that up to 10 per cent of the applications built on this platform are banking apps. It said while a patch has been released, millions of people using apps built on this platform are at risk of having sensitive information, such as their login details, stolen.

    Experts said the reality of the situation is that 95 per cent of successful attacks or security breaches are caused by human errors, according to IBM’s Cyber Security Intelligence Index. As a result, hackers continue to aggressively seek out such vulnerabilities to exploit.

    These warnings are coming when mobile banking, licensed by the CBN and driven by banks, is recording slow sluggish uptake. In spite of this, all of the MDBs in the country offer one mobile banking solutions or the other.

    A software expert said smartphone users must understand is that all operating systems are vulnerable to attack because it is routed through the cyber space.  Operating systems are by design complex pieces of code.

    According to him, the process is made more difficult because apps are written to go into an app store and are then downloaded onto an operating system.

    An expert, Herman Singh said at each step – application development, the app store, operating system – there is the potential for vulnerabilities to be exploited.

    At the application level, apps can be deliberately infected, or become vulnerable because the developers have overlooked something.

    “You have to consider who is writing the app, and who is vetting it before you just download it onto your phone,” Singh warned.

    At the application store level, not all app stores were created equal.

    “The Apple screening is the most rigorous. All Apple apps are very carefully tested before they are allowed into the store for download. None of the other app stores are as thorough,” he said.

    The best-known app stores (digital distribution centres for application software) include Apple, Blackberry and Google Play. But because the Android operating system (launched by Google) is so ubiquitous there are over 30 various app stores flogging their wares for Android devices.

    The reason for this is not far-fetched. Android operating system is open and allows for a high degree of customisation and exposes users to vulnerability.

    “The Apple operating system on the other hand is tightly coupled to iTunes and the Apple apps. The company has kept proprietary control over its system.”

    President, Nigeria Internet Group (NIG), Bayo Banjo, said the country was yet to witness a major cyber attack in the country. According to him, what the nation is currently witnessing is cyber-assisted crimes.

     

    Way forward

    Phone users should be on guard against cyber-attack. Logging onto an unsecured Wi-Fi connection is risky, especially if the information one is working with is vital.

    Care must also be taken in downloading content and visits to sites via the mobile phone.

    Phone users are advised to stick to Apple, Google Play or the device manufacturer – Samsung’s app store for instance, for download because third party downloads makes your phone vulnerable to crooks.

    Make sure you always have an up-to-date version of the operating system on your phone. The same rule should also apply to  banking applications.

    “Don’t jailbreak your device. This allows access to the operating system’s file system and manager, allowing the download of applications that are not approved by Apple, Google or the handset manufacturer,”Singh counselled.

  • Insurgency takes toll on telecom service in Northeast

    Residents of major towns in Borno State, an epicentre of Boko Haram insurgency,   are finding it difficult in accessing telecommunication services.

    They alleged that they are being compelled to pay heavily for telecoms services  because the network signals are poor.

    According to a resident who identified himself simply as Audu, any time some of them wish to make calls from their villages to Maiduguri or Abuja, they will need to trek as far as 30km to the next town where network signals have strayed into the community.

    Audu who spoke through an interpreter said: “Some of us are at the mercy of the network of neighbouring countries such as Cameroun, Niger or Chad. We need to communicate to survive and get along with our trans-Sharahan trade.

    “Northern Borno for instance is completely at the mercy of the Republic of Cameroun as most of the border towns do not have Nigerian networks. Where they do have, they do not operate with the +234 Nigerian country code. So to talk to loved ones in Mafa from Ngala for instance, we must migrate from the Cameroun country code of +237 to that of Nigeria’s +234 to get a cousin in Mafa just because there are no Nigerian masts to support their communications.”

    Another resident who identified himself as Ahmadou said while traveling along the federal road stretch, there were many areas where the networks disappeared and reappeared, especially on approaching a local government headquarters such as Dikwa.  “When I got to a particular bridge which is between  Cameroun and Nigeria, I was advised by fellow treavellers to avoid calls coming from Nigeria since my phone had already alerted me that I was now in Cameroun. Picking any call may lead to getting my entire airtime wiped off because call tariffs are far higher in Cameroun,” he said.

    He said Etisalat’s network took over the airwaves because it was the only contiguous network in the area, adding that what appeared on his mobile phone screen was: “Etisalt welcomes you to Cameroun N175 per minute for local calls, N395 per minute to call Nigeria, receive calls at N39 per minute and send text messages at N105 per page. Internet and data usage will be charged at N20 per 10kb session excluding local Blackberry and data plans.”

    The Nation’s checks revealed that almost all the major towns either do not have networks such as Airtel, MTN and Globacom or are using whatever Cameroun could offer simply because the base transmission stations (BTS) have been vandalised by the rampaging Boko Haram insurgents.

    Secretary, Borno Elders’ Forum, Bulama Gubio lamented that most of their towns and villages are not hooked to the major service providers. He alleged neglect in terms of the provision of telephony services.

    “When my people call Airtel or MTN, they are charged extra by these networks and that serves as a drain on the little they have,” he lamented

    Towns such as Abadon, Kukawa, Gubio, Magumeri, Marte and even the isolated Kalarbagi and more than 50 towns and villages are not connected to any service providers.

    A major dealer of telephones accessories and recharge cards, Tenimu Mustapha  lamented that his shop was overrun by insurgents recently, adding that he sells both Cameroonian and Nigerian air time for interested customers. He regretted that sales have gone down since the beginning of the insurgency in the area.

    He said: “We just have to remain at the mercy of Cameroon as long as our brothers in the rest of the country want us to remain so. You can’t imagine that each time we make a call to a place as close as Dikwa here or even Barma, we are charged more by Nigeria.

    “We are only exempted from that when we call the numerous villages and towns along the border towns. That means we will be restricted to within the Cameroun network instead of crossing into the +234 which is Nigeria’s.”

    Reacting to enquiries, Manager, Public Relations, Etisalat Brands and Communications Division, Chineze Amanfo said the telco does not charge discriminatory tariff in the country.

    She said: “The highest tariff on Etisalat network (offnet inclusive) are 40k/sec for voice calls, 5k per kilobyte for browsing and N4 per sms page. Any of these can only go higher if the customer is making an international call or browsing whilst roaming or sends text message to international number & premium rated services (downloads and special services).

    “We have the Dynamic Discount Tariff product – Talkzone for the NE region. Talkzone offers dynamic tariffs to customers based on the location and network utilisation at the time of call. This tariff was launched in October 2011, and remains active. It could give as much as over 90 per cent discount to on net calls (based on network utilisation at the time of call, that is a higher discount applies when network is less busy).”

  • Long road to e-ID card

    Long road to e-ID card

    The journey has been long and tortuous. But the National Identity Management Commission (NIMC) says it is coasting home to giving  Nigerians an all-purpose electronic National Identity Card, reports. LUCAS AJANAKU .

    After months of preparations, President Goodluck Jonathan will today launch the proposed electronic National Identity Card or e-ID Card for the whole country.

    Analysts say the launch will mark a  milestone in the nation’s quest for a reliable data base on national security.

    Director-General, National Identity Management Commission (NIMC), Mr Chris Onyemenam, said the project  is being managed in conformity with global standards and best practices.

    He described the project as “a game changer”adding: “We are talking about unique identification of Nigerians and legal residents which must be relied upon by all.”

    He said: “We have again proven that something good can come out of the ‘House of David’. The world is about to receive a unique card from Nigeria. For the first time, the national e-ID will have a payment solution, something that is unprecedented in the world and that’s why so many critics believed it can never happen.  We are serious about the image of Nigeria and playing by global rules of engagement for such acceptance about issues around the dignity of the Nigerian international status.”

    Nigerians have not forgotten efforts by various administrations in the past to create a dependable identity scheme in the country. The attempts did not only met with partial success but ended in a fiasco. These initial steps, including the creation of the National Department of Civic Registration (NDCR) and the Sagem deal it contracted, ended with more scandals than the actual results it originally set to achieve.

    These circumstances had led to people viewing the sector with a kind of cynicism. Some even came to see the ID industry as a cash cow for contractors and the privileged class in government to line their pockets at the expense of public interest.

    He said: “We needed to do more than the ordinary to convince Nigerians that we are up to the task.

    “We have put in place an infrastructure that is technology-driven and based on a verifiable global best practice and this has been so acknowledged by an international standards institute.”

    The current success started through the passing into law of NIMC Act by the National Assembly under the administration of former President Olusegun Obasanjo and the administration of late President Musa Yar’Adua. The DG said President Jonathan, who was a part of the Yar’Adua government, is especially to be commended for insisting that the project be managed professionally and in accordance with the provisions of the NIMC Act without political interference.

    According to sources, there is very little that NIMC inherited from the defunct NDCR that could be put into ready use. This is because,  the time  it took to establish the commission and the winding down of operations of the old agency, there were also corresponding shifts in technologies and systems which are needed for the activities in the new setting.

    The old workforce was not only over bloated; it lacked the specialised skills which was required to frog leap from the analogue system of the old to the digital and biometric operations of the present.

    He said the government of Dr. Jonathan insisted that the emerging identity sector in the country be run professionally by creating the enabling environment which allowed local practioners in the sector to be benchmarked against international best practices for world-class infrastructures, adding that the outcome what the country has today.

    October last year, the President said valuable time and resources had unfortunately been expended in the past in an attempt at delivering an effective identity platform. He therefore urged that the pitfalls of the past be avoided.

    “As we recalibrate our efforts, we must avoid the pitfalls of the past, and stay focused on achieving results,” the president said.

    He identified the great potential which the sector has for the country and had, as a result seen it as a part of the Transformation Agenda of his government. And this he demonstrated when he formally launched the enrolment exercise for the issuance of the NIN at the State House in Abuja last year.

    “Today, our effort and commitment to work for a greater Nigeria has brought us here for the launch of an Enrolment Exercise for the Issuance of a NIN. The importance of proof of identity documentation as a critical social infrastructure for national development cannot be over-emphasised,” the president had said, adding that the new identity infrastructure would aid the work of law enforcement agencies because of the ability to proof of identity of persons which the security agencies would have at their disposal. Another component of this capability is at the heart of the fight against corruption in the country.

    Onyemenam said the consumer credit sector would equally be enhanced as banks, for example, would be in a far better position to know their customers along their financial history which is a means for creating access for the consumer sector of the economy.

    The e-ID card will make authentication of persons possible. This will also drive the electronic payment system and reduce the cost of managing the currency component of the naira which is estimated to be as high as N1.93 trillion a year by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).

    The new identify infrastructure would equally help government in the fight against poverty as it will enhance the introduction of social security or welfare payments which will create economic opportunities and lift the incomes of millions of Nigerians.

    Onyemenam said the new national e-ID will attract positive recognition and respect for the country and her citizens especially at international gateways and land borders. He also said the agency has put in place the conditions for a global recognition for the National Identity Management Systems (NIMS) which was being systematically put in place.

    According to him, Nigerians have taken their fate in their own hands more than ever before as the effort was entirely driven by local capacity. In other words, NIMC has bequeathed a genuine and verifiable identity that could be relied upon by the international community

    One significant achievement of NIMC which has contributed to the success of the project is the sensible collaboration which the commission went into with MasterCard, a United States (U.S.) global player in the electronic payment system landscape.

    He said: “One of the most important functions is the payment function, which for now is supported by MasterCard. And for MasterCard to accept to collaborate with us speaks volumes. It means that we have the right ideas and vision. It’s our responsibility to ensure that the right qualifications or criteria that would qualify our cards to be accepted worldwide as a MasterCard card are met and observed and adhered to very strictly.”

    The national e-ID card has Access Bank as the pilot issuer institution. Other issuer institutions which are to join in subsequent phases include Zenith Bank, United Bank for Africa, Unity Bank as well as Skye Bank, Unity Bank and FirstBank.

    Another significant achievement was the ISO/IEC27001:2005 certification which the commission earned on account of its information security management system which put the identity infrastructure in the country in at par with global standards.

    He said it is important to point out that the international certification of the national biometric infrastructure was conducted by the British Standard Institute (BSI), a UK agency with over 100 years in standards, in collaboration with the Lagos-based ICT firm, Digital Jewels.

    “This certification is based on the audit of what we have put in place to ensure secure management of personal information and privacy of individuals. So it means that we have kept faith with our promise to meet global best practice in the roll out of NIMS infrastructure. Our services and infrastructure can be relied upon by the world, simple,” he said.

    Before the accreditation and award of ISO/IEC27001:2005 certification April this year, an independent laboratory and field test had been conducted on the New Smart National Identity Card and this indicated that the process was equally in line with the security recommendations and standards of the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO).

    NIMC said the successful testing confirmed that the new smart card would be used as a travel document when it is launched and issued to Nigerians, as it has all the security details for individual profiling and identification.

    The agency explained that the Card Personalisation facilities had also passed the User Acceptance Test (UAT) which was followed closely by the successful testing and validation of the EuroMasterVisa (EMV) compliance testing.

    Also, the test showed that the new e-ID card can be used at Point of Sale and automated teller machines (ATM) for transactions currently available on the conventional ATM cards.

    A source in NIMC said the key thing about the milestone achievement is that it is based on technology which is concrete and verifiable while very few public-sector institutions have the international certifications which has conferred global credibility to the e-ID project in the country.

    He said: “We opted for this as part of credibility-built measures as we know so many people have lost faith in the ability of the public sector to create a basic and support infrastructure to get this identity management issue behind us.

    “We now need to achieve the GigE Vision Stream Protocol (GVCP) to silence them forever and face the more daunting task of sustainability.”

    Laudable as this initiative is, considering the sheer size of the country and peculiar topographic terrains, it is hoped that the e-ID cards will get to the people for whom they were designed on time too.

  • Mobile health delivery blues

    Mobile health delivery blues

    The liberalisation of the telecoms sector over 10 years ago made access to phone easy. Today, Nigerians use their phones for various things, especially business. The revolution is also opening a new vista for poor rural and urban dwellers to access health care services. How far can this go? LUCAS AJANAKU reports.

    Forty-three-year-old Blessing Adewumi lives in Egbeda, a Lagos suburb. A petty trader and mother of four, she lost her husband about four years ago.

    Since then, life has been difficult for her, because she sponsors the education of her  children.

    Recently, she took ill. Instead of going to the hospital, she asked Tina, her eldest daughter, 18, to call Mama Kazeem, a popular drug hawker in the neighbourhood.

    She said:  “I don’t have money to go to the hospital. Iya Kazeem will ‘count’ malaria drugs for me and I will be well. She is our family doctor. By the time I give her N200, she will ‘select’ drugs for me and in no time, I will be back on my feet. Going to the hospital is expensive. I have to pay house rent, school fees and feed my four children without any support. Aside God, there is no supporter, so I always pray to God not to allow my children to fall sick.”

    Another housewife, who simply identified herself as Mama Glory, also has a sad tale to tell. She was not feeling fine, so she visited one of the private hospitals where tests were run on her. When the result came out, it showed that she had typhoid fever. She was billed N10,000 and was told she would be on admisison  for three days.

    She never went back. Reason: She does not have enough money. “If I have N10,000, I will start a ‘pure’ water business immediately. Instead, I will go to the market and get Iya alagbo (herbs seller) to arrange agbo for me. It will flush it out of my body system,” she said.

    Mrs Adewumi and Mama Glory are few of the many poor Nigerians not covered by the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) because they are not engaged in the formal sectors of the economy.

    Their stories are common, especially among rural dwellers. They cannot pay for their treatment. Many of them toil all day long, trying to eke out a living.

    Minister of Communications Technology Dr  Omobola Johnson lamented that the ability of many sub-Saharan African countries to improve their rating and ranking on the Human Development Index (HDI), especially those that relate to health, is constrained by several socio-economic and infrastructural factors.

    She said: “For example, Nigeria’s per capita spending on health is $161, comparing unfavorably with the $ 948 calculated by the World Health Organisation (WHO) as the recommended total global spending on health per person per year. Inherent in this low per capita spend on health is an acute shortage of healthcare workers.

    “Africa faces a severe shortage of trained medical personnel–we have approximately three per cent of the world’s health workers despite having 11 per cent of the world’s population, a statistic that is indeed worsened by the fact that many healthcare professionals opt to work abroad after their training because of better remuneration, better facilities and better opportunities for career growth and aspirations.”

    It is in view of this grim picture that the  partnership among NHIS and information communication technology (ICT) firm, MTN and Salt & Einstein MTS, to launch a health insurance programme, which will afford its customers who cannot access quality health care, the opportunity to do so through MTN Y’ello Health Cover is instructive.

    Airtel Nigeria also launched an initiative in this direction to deepen health insurance scheme and bring health at affordable costs to its subscribers.

    The MTN Y’ello Health Cover is an all-inclusive mobile health insurance programme, which will afford Nigerians the opportunity to access good, affordable and quality healthcare service wherever, whenever the need arises.

    Through the programme, the NHIS is working with all the leading Health Management Organisations (HMOs) to enabled mobile subscribers to opt into a micro healthcare insurance cover where, they can access a range of pre-defined medical treatments for which affordable premium can also be remitted through the subscribers’ mobile phone.

    According to the telco, this will enable subscribers under this programme have access to unlimited number of visits to the hospital with as low as a daily or weekly airtime deduction of N35 and N250 to access effective health care as many times as treatment is needed annually. It also gives access to a combination of over 7000 hospitals and primary healthcare providers nationwide currently registered under the NHIS scheme from which subscribers can choose.

    The main objective of the programme is to ensure the removal of financial barriers, which means, poor people can have unfettered access to good and effective healthcare without the usual “out-of-pocket expenses”. It is not always that one has substantial amount of money in the pocket, particularly when one is facing health challenges.

    Health insurance is a type of coverage that ensures the cost of an insured individual’s medical and surgical expenses are paid by the scheme on the behalf of the insured. It is being provided through this programme to save the masses from self medication, or from shying away from receiving treatment because of cost or other competing needs or considerations.

    Executive Secretary/Chief Executive Officer, NHIS, Dr. Femi Thomas, said MTN will leverage on its huge subscribers to take healthcare to the nooks and crannies of the country.  He said: “MTN is a big player in the Nigerian economy, having a good number of registered Nigerians on its database. To be able to reach out to Nigerians, we at NHIS decided to partner with Salt & Einstein MTS and MTN Nigeria on this new initiative to achieve “Universal Health Coverage” for Nigerians nationwide.

    “The time has come for us to extend health insurance to Nigerians from all walks of life. With Nigeria’s population in mind, NHIS in partnership with MTN Nigeria and Salt & Einstein MTS is bent on providing more efficient health care services to those who indeed cannot afford them. This will help pool risk and share healthcare costs equitably across the population.”

    Chief Executive Officer, MTN Nigeria, Michael Ikpoki, said the focus market for the Y’ello health insurance cover are Nigerians who have no health insurance cover principally because they cannot afford the regular health insurance services in the market.

    “These individuals like everyone else, need medical care. However, without access to insurance, they probably would be having occasional challenges paying for medical treatment, because such expenses would usually be without or at short notice. It is to take away this burden of impromptu medical expenses that we are partnering to introduce this product,” he said.

    He added that the importance of education and sensitisation of the populace about healthcare and commended the NHIS for its drive to provide universal healthcare to Nigerians.

    The Executive Chairman, Salt & Einstein MTS, Dr. Ernest Ndukwe, said bringing his vast experience in mobile technology and telecommunication industry in Nigeria to the table, identified the need to leverage the market penetration and unmatched reach of mobile telecoms in Nigeria. The former Executive Vice Chairman of the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) said statistics reveal that mobile telecoms subscription in Nigeria is over 129 million. This creates adequate grounds for direct health insurance provision to Nigerians who, without this, would have no access to the NHIS.

    Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, Salt & Einstein MTS, the 0obile insurance services aggregator, said findings have shown that Nigeria still has less than four per cent of its population covered by basic health care services at this time in our nation’s history. “There is no disputing the fact that, one of the best things to do at this time is to come together, working with NHIS and of course, starting off with Nigeria’s leading telecommunications operator, MTN, to bring this health insurance cover to Nigerians who, hitherto, have been excluded  from access to good health care service. MTN has demonstrated that they are interested in the social good and welfare of Nigerians. We hope to create more products that benefit Nigerians across the country,” he said.

    The MTN Y’ello insurance cover is one of the many ways Africa’s leading telecommunications network is adding value to the lives of it subscribers. The next leg of the launch will take place in Abuja at a yet-to-be-announced date.

    To make health care accessible and affordable to all, the WHO, the World Bank and other experts recommend among other things: mandatory and publicly subsidised health insurance scheme.

    Experts say while the initiative is commendable, more will still need to be done in the area of enlightenment.

    The partners in the project would need to do plenty of work in getting the message about the product across to the rural poor that are largely illiterate. This, they said, could be achieved by running the messages in the major indigenous languages on the operators’ network as well as in both print and electronic media.

  • Etisalat: Nigeria mustn’t miss digital switch over deadline

    Etisalat: Nigeria mustn’t miss digital switch over deadline

    Etisalat Nigeria has warned against missing the digital switch over (DSO) date set by the International Tele-communications Union (ITU). The firm said it would not be in Nigeria’s interest.

    The ITU has set next year for all member-countries to switch off all analogue transmission infrastructure and move over to the digital mode.

    The National Broadcasting Commission (NBC) is on the vanguard of complying with the directive. It said it would achieve DSO before the year ends to enable it tighten loose ends ahead of the deadline.

    Etisalat’s Director, Network Engineering Temi Ogunbanbi said if the country fails to achieve DSO, it will not only become a dumping ground for analogue transmitters, it will also make the country uncompetitive  internationaly.

    Speaking during an interactive session with ICT editors in Lagos, he said the spectrum that would be freed by the NBC to the Nigerian Comunication Commission NCC) will be of great value to the telecoms sector, lamenting that the dearth of spectrum has not allowed the telco to deploy more advanced technology.

    He said the telco has invested enormously to grow the network to achieve the excellent services it is rendering to the customers despite the challenges in the sector, where power supply is erratic and vandalism of telecoms infrastructure rampart.

    He said IHS, which bought its “passive towers”, has promised to deploy alternative energy sources to low operating cost, especially the cost of fuelling generators at base transmission stations (BTS).

    Speaking on the achievements of the telco, its Chief Executive Officer, Mathew Willsher, said it has grown its subscribers’ strength, adding that the future is bright for the telco as the NCC intensifies efforts at ensuring a level playing field for all players.

    “We have acquired 20 per cent more customers. We are just 19.5million customers, which up from 15.3 million same time last year; that’s very good growth our proportion of the market is now 15 per cent , so over the last six years, we have grown our business and establish as a major player in the market. We are very encouraged by the growth.

    “Of course, it is a company that was built on great customer experience, we are leaders in customer satisfaction, but it is very important that we continue to do so though with new customers, there will be increasing demand and increasing pressure on the network.

    “We are not standing still; we are investing and of course expanding capacity so that we can remain leader in their minds for their experience and remain leader indeed in the industry’s mind as we already are for network quality recognised by the NCC.”

  • Knowledge vital to competitiveness, says NCS

    Knowledge vital to competitiveness, says NCS

    For Nigeria to remain competitive in the global economic space, knowledge, driven by muti-stakeholders collaboration, is required, the Nigeria Computer Society (NCS) has said.

    According to a communiqué at the end of its 25th Annual National Conference in  Enugu,   stakeholders and attendees agreed that ICT is an enabler for growth and national development, capable of being the highest employer.

    It was also agreed that competitive advantage in business has always been driven by knowledge adding that multiple stakeholders need to collaborate to build strong partnerships in the transformation of Nigeria from information society to knowledge-based economy.

    The experts also averred that a knowledge-based economy is predicated on the production and dissemination of ideas and that there is the urgent need to recognise knowledge as a resource that can be codified, registered and made tradeable.

    In view of this, it was agreed that there was the need for a well-concerted investment in knowledge production through ICT and to achieve this requires immediate domestication and localisation of Nigeria ICT policy through the various tiers of government and laterally across Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) of the government.