Category: Infotech

  • NOA woos critics of National ID project

    Director-General of National Orientation Agency (NOA), Mr Mike Omeri, has expressed the readiness of his agency to partner with the National Identity Management Commission (NIMC) to provide a comprehensive national database in the country.

    In a statement, the Director, Corporate Communication, Anthony Okwudiafor, said Omeri told the NIMC Director-General, Chris Onyemenam, during a visit that critics would soon appreciate the project’s importance.

    Omeri said it was time to bring together the data gathering agencies. He said while NIMC collects information, NOA gathers data to serve the agencie, noting that they are partners in progress.

    He urged the NIMC to enlist the NOA among its stakeholders, because it is working hard with the United States’ Department of Contact Centre and other agencies to have a central data system, and that NIMC has the mandate to harmonise databases to publicise government’s policies and programmes.

    “What you are doing will, no doubt, eliminate and streamline the activities of identity requiring and data collection agencies that seemed to be doing what we really need to do one-off for the interest of the nation and for those who kick against what you are doing are ignorant of the importance of Identity Management in a nation’s building and national security.

    “The National Identity Management System (NIMS) is the best thing that will happen to Nigeria in these critical times of security challenges. It will help the Federal Government to tackle insecurity and social vices in the country,” he stated.

    Earlier, Onyemenam reminded the NOA chief that the Commission’s main reason for reaching out to NOA was based on the commission’s belief that the agency has the competence to reach out to Nigerians to support the NIMS project

    “The ability to make reference to the database upon which the card was issued is the way out,”he said, adding that the Commission has been working on the identity infrastructure and was able to begin the pilot scheme on February 23.

    He said it is issuing the National Identification Number (NIN) in over 30 states hoping that as soon as the project is launched, NIMC will cover the 774 local government areas.

     

  • Should NCC intervene in market domination?

    Should NCC intervene in market domination?

    A few days ago, the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) asked telecom giant MTN to increase its tariff to check its domination of the market. Some argue that NCC was right in stepping into the matter; others believe that it was wrong. Lucas Ajanaku examines the pros and cons of the argument.

     

    The  Chief Executive Officer, MTN Nigeria, Brett Goschen, is media shy. So, when it was his turn to speak on the Potentials and prospects of MNP in Nigeria, at the launch of the Mobile Number Portability (MNP) by the Nigerian Comunications Commission (NCC) at the MUSON Centre, Lagos, many had waited to hear what he would say, especially after his counterparts in other telecoms firms, beginning with Segun Ogunsanya of Airtel have spoken.

    However, to the admiration of the audience, Goschen, on a lighter note, said there were many reasons why MTN’s subscribers are more than that of its competitors.

    Goschen may not be too far from the truth. With the country’s subscriber base above 113 million as at last December, MTN, according to sources, has about 50 million subscribers; its competitors, Globacom, Airtel and Etisalat share the balance.

    In a report, the telco said it increased its subscriber numbers by 3.2 per cent in the first quarter of last year to 195.4 million. This growth was led by Nigeria, where it added a net 3.9 million new customers in those three months, helping offset a net loss of 470,000 customers in South Africa, its home market.

     

    KPMG report

    The industry growth has led to the increased maturity and sophistication of individual networks and also ushered in intense competition among players.

    To ensure fair play in the industry, NCC said it engaged KPMG Professional Services in last June to study the level of competition. Kangid said undertook a similar study for the commission in 2005, where it was revealed that no operator satisfied the criteria necessary for being declared dominant in the mobile and long distance markets, which were considered at the time.

    KPMG found MTN and Globacom to be “dominant” in the telecoms sector. “Based on findings, the Commission has determined that MTN is dominant in the Mobile Voice Market,” the report said. In the wholesale leased lines and transmission capacity market, the Commission noted that Glo and MTN had dominant positions.

    KPMG noted: “The mobile voice market is not effectively competitive and is still highly concentrated with an HHI of 3063. MTN has a 44 per cent market share of subscribers within this market. There is also a wide differential (of about 300 per cent) between on net and off net calls and this is indicative of the likely establishment of a calling club for MTN subscribers.”

    NCC ruled that the dominant operator in the mobile voice market, MTN shall be required to collapse on net and off net retail tariffs: “The differential between the on–net and off net retail tariffs will be immediately collapsed. The tariff for on net and off-net will be the same, and subject to periodic review.”

    The regulator said it would enforce accounting separation on the dominant operator, adding that it may require the dominant operator to submit details on specific aspects of its operations from time to time as the need arises.

     

    Stakeholders’ perspective

    Analysts fear that NCC ‘s decision is an attempt for the regulator to micro-manage the sector. They argue that since the sector has been liberalised, the onus is on the operators to come out with unique products that will draw customers to their network.

    President, Association of Telecoms Companies of Nigeria (ATCON), Lanre Ajayi, said those arguing that the NCC is trying to micro manage the industry have a point. He said it was the duty of NCC to ensure that there is always a level playing field in the industry.

    “There is certainly valid argument that the NCC is trying to micro manage the industry but the regulator has the responsibility to ensure that there is a level playing field among the operators, it has the responsibility to also ensure that the dominant operator does not abuse its strength; in other words, they do not oppress the smaller ones. If you recall the days of NITEL, we had that challenge when it was the dominant operator and used its power to oppress the smaller operators by denying them access to connection to the network. We all complained during that time. So, if we complained about NITEL’s dominance then, it is not appropriate to allow dominant operator to oppress smaller operators but the NCC needs to ascertain whether the dominant operator was indeed oppressing the smaller ones. I don’t know if that has been ascertained or not,” he said, insisting that it is within the powers of the regulator to ensure that a dominant operator does not distort the market.

    ”We should be careful not to encourage NCC to start micro managing the operators. This is something that has to be carefully balanced such that while they are trying to protect the smaller operators against the dominant operator, we don’t end up micro managing the operators. So, we must strike a balance,” he said. The ATCON boss said NCC should not be misconstrued as its effort is to deepen competition, which will benefit the consumers.

    “If there is no competition and you encourage a dominant operator, other operators may die and if they do, there will be no competition again and we will be back to the days of NITEL. This is what this effort is trying to do. There is no basis to be scared about the future of the industry based on this development,” he said.

    President, National Association of Telecoms Subscribers (NATCOMS), Deolu Ogunbanjo, praised the NCC for the step it took. He said in the United States, the regulator also stepped into the matter involving Microsoft. “This will further protect the market and ultimately the subscribers. So, there is no basis to fret over the development,” he said.

    He said volume should drive the business, adding that with the introduction of MNP, end user tariffs will go down while quality service will be offered the subscribers.

     

    MTN, ALTON keep mum

    MTN and Association of Licensed Telecoms Operators of Nigeria (ALTON) decline to comment. While several calls made to ALTON’s Chairman, Gbenga Adebayo, were not picked, he acknowledged a text message, but failed to pick subsequent calls. For MTN, an e-mail sent to its General Manager, Public Affairs, Funmi Omogbenigun, was not acknowledged.

    While the Structure-Conduct-Performance (SCP) model was adopted in the study, marketing concentration based on Herfinahl Hirschman Index (HHI), existence of price leadership, exploitative pricing and exclusionary pricing were parameters used under pricing strategies; network coverage was the only parameter used under geographic coverage of the operators.

    “The SCP model postulates that the structure of a market determines to large extent the conduct of the participants in the market, which in turn, influences the performance of the firms within the market with respect to profitability and efficiency. This model, or its close substitutes, has been used in assessing competition within the telecoms industry in a wide range of countries including the United Kingdom, the United States, and Kenya. The reliance on this model is considered relevant especially in the context of forward looking ex ante regulation, since conduct detrimental to competition must be anticipated primarily on the basis of the structural characteristics of the market,” the Executive Vice Chairman/CEO, NCC, had Eugene Juwah, said.

     

    Regulator defends stance

    According to NCC, dominance in itself is not negative because it is an indication of the effectiveness, resourcefulness and strategic decisions of the operator. It, however, noted that the conduct of the operator determines how its dominance would be perceived, particularly if that conduct is likely to lessen competition and distort the market.

    The regulator promised that necessary regulatory tools to correct current and potential anti-competitive practices such as predatory pricing, margin squeezes and cross-subsidisation by any of the operators with dominant position in any of the market segments or sub-segments are to be applied by the Commission.

    NCC said the KPMG study started in the form of interactive meetings with the operators, followed by a stakeholders’ forum to sensitise the industry and provide opportunities for constructive contributions on the state of the telecommunication market. In addition, the network operators provided industry data for the study.

    Upon review, NCC said the market was segmented into voice, data, upstream and downstream services. The voice and data markets have mobile and fixed sub-segments. The sub-segments of the upstream market are spectrum and frequency services, tower services, network services, wholesale broadband/internet services and wholesale leased lines and transmission capacity services while handsets/devices and applications/contents make up the sub-segments of the downstream market.

     

     

     

    Fixed voice loses market

    “The study concluded that the mobile voice market is not effectively competitive. The fixed voice market has consistently lost market share over the past three years and no operator was considered by the study to be dominant. Though the mobile data market segment has grown significantly in the last five years, the study concluded that no operator is dominant. With the current circumstances in the upstream supply segment the study concluded that it is doubtful that the fixed data market will achieve effective competition. The study also concluded that the upstream market is not effectively competitive,” NCC said.

    NCC said consistent with the liberalisation of the Nigerian telecommunications industry in year 2000, it has facilitated market entry through its transparent licensing processes for various communications services. It added that today, Nigeria is the fastest growing telecommunications market in Africa and it is noteworthy that the giant strides in the telecommunications industry over the last decade were the direct effects of enabling regulatory environment created by the Commission.

    It said it acknowledges the resoluteness and commitment of the network operators towards the development of the telecommunications industry and will continue to partner with them as key stakeholders in further advancing the telecommunications market for the benefit of consumers and the entire industry.

    It is yet to be seen what impact this will have on the subscriber base of MTN.

     

     

     

  • Chams, others to assist new ICT entrepreneurs

    A group of firms are set to assist fresh entrepreneurs in the sector to grow their business.

    Already, seven teams have been shortlisted from a pool of 160 teams that applied for the cash.

    Chief Executive Officer, TechnoVision, Tomi Davies, told The Nation that funding is fundamental to the success of young people who have business ideas, adding that this informed the decision of 14 entrepreneurs to invest funds for youths to build their business.

    “We are not just investing money, we are also investing our time to ensure that they succeed. We are going to guide the team, monitor them and make our networks available to them so that they can grow. The whole idea is to grow entrepreneurship in the country. Another round of pitching will be done again in September. I can guarantee that no angel will invest less than N1 million on the team. That is the minimum. Any of the angels could invest N10million or even N100 million,” he said.

    An angel is a venture capital fund investor.

    He added that some of the angels belong to private equity venture capital firms.

    He said the plan is complementary to that of the Federal Ministry of Communications Technology which has launched the Information Technology Developers Entrepreneurship Accelerator (iDEA) Incubation Centre.

    “We must support the Federal Government to grow entrepreneurship in the ICT sector. This is our response to that. The whole idea is to provide seed fund to entrepreneurs to start up,” he said.

    iDEA is anchored on the huge potential the software segment of the industry hold for the economy both in employment generation and value addition to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of the nation.

  • Ericsson’s semi-finalists out

    Ericsson has announced the semi-finalists for the annual Ericsson Application Awards.

    TeamKenya from Kenya, Team Trokxi and Team Nimdee Mobile from Ghana are among the semi-finalists. Winning teams will receive 25,000 euro in each category.

    TeamKenya and Trokxi are nominated in the student category and Nimdee mobile is nominated in the company category.

    TeamKenya developed an application that makes it easier for electorates to know and interact with political aspirants in their location, to learn more about the laws and topics surrounding electoral processes, get the latest electoral news and also to be informed of the latest electoral events.

    Team Trokxi developed an application that provides you with estimated fares to make informed decisions for public transportation. It helps you budget your trips, save money, time and minimize transport-related frauds.

    Team Nimdee developed an application that enables African merchants to access bigger markets on the continent and also the global market, while allowing merchants to reach their customers on the same platform.

    The three teams from Africa are competing for the first place spot with teams from China, United Kingdom, United States, Romania, Poland, Portugal and Brazil.

     

     

     

     

  • Airtel: We’re ready for number portability

    AIRTEL Nigeria is ready to implement the Mobile Number Portability (MNP), its Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer Segun Ogunsanya has said.

    Ogunsanya said with Airtel’s robust and expanded 3.75G network coverage, many subscribers who had waited so long to join the ‘best friends network’ could exploit the window offered by the MNP to realise their dreams.

    He said Airtel was the first telecoms operator in the country to call for the implementation of MNP during its brand launch on November, 19, 2010 at the Hilton Hotel in Abuja.

    “I am happy to inform you that we have done all our homework and we are fully ready for the MNP go-live date. Airtel has transformed its network, investing over $1.5billion to improve network efficiency and quality.

    ‘’Airtel was the first telecoms operator to complete 4G LTE (Long Term Evolution) trial in Nigeria and also the first service provider to roll out HD (High Definition) voice in the country,” he said.

    He added that the telco has altered the nation’s telecoms landscape with its tariff and value offerings with the launch of several groundbreaking tariff and service platforms, including 2Good Offers, MAMO (My Airtel My Offer) and a bouquet of data offerings, pointing out that with such an impressive record, he had no doubt that Airtel was the network of choice to Nigerians.

    Director, Regulatory Affairs and Special Projects of the firm, Osondu Nwokoro, who spoke on how the MNP works, said Airtel has a history of being customer-centric as evident in the numerous customer service awards it had won.

  • HP unveils ElitePad 900

    HP has unveiled the HP ElitePad 900. It is a tablet that balances a beautiful design with enterprise-grade features, functionality and support.

    Designed for business, government healthcare and retail, it features HP ElitePad Smart Jackets, which add connectivity options and longer battery life along with specific add-ons that customise the tablet for specialised uses.

    The HP ElitePad is an ultrathin, lightweight Microsoft® Windows 8 tablet that delivers features to keep IT managers happy and touts a design that employees will crave. It offers full serviceability, enhanced security and manageability found in HP Elite PCs, packed with a battery that passed over 115,000 hours of tests.

    Speaking at the launch of the HP Elitepad 900 in Lagos, Ify Udoji, the Category Manager, PC HP Nigeria Limited, said: “The Elitepad 900 is not a mere tablet, but a total enterprise solution targeted for your business needs. The product comes in a thin, sleek design and offers one up to 18 hours of non-stop Elitepad magic from day-to-day with its expansion jacket.”

    Consumer Channels Group Director, Microsoft, Mark Ihimoyan, said: “One of the features of the HP Elitepad 900 is that it allows one to consume and create content. Also, with the product, one can go from a touch screen to a non-touch screen function just at the click of a button, thus catering to the needs of varied consumers. We are proud of our partnership with HP and excited to be here at the unveiling of this device. If you want to stay on the cutting edge of technology, this device is a must.”

     

     

     

  • Firm introduces VivoBook series

    A Global consumer notebook vendor, ASUS, has introduced the VivobookS200 in Nigeria.

    It forms the beginning of devices in screen sizes ranging from 11.6″ to 15.6″.

    According to firm in a statement, optimised for Microsoft Windows 8, ASUS VivoBooks has an attractive, durable, and very portable design and integrates ASUS SonicMaster audio and 2-second instant on with 32GB of WebStorage cloud space for three years.

    The ASUS VivoBooks embodies a new way of offering enjoyable and intuitive notebook experiences to customers.

    Simplice D. Zaongo, Country Product Manager, ASUSTek Computer Incorporated, said, “The ASUS Vivobook range is developed around natural touch as key to incredible user experiences and greater customer happiness.” According to him, VivoBooks add greater happiness to lives providing the finest touch technology for more natural and rewarding interaction.

    He said VivoBook Series products have been designed with stand-out aesthetics, true-to-life sound, and instinctive touch that are ideal for the increasingly cloud-based nature of computing, supporting seamless connectivity and usage on the go while specifically aimed at making people happier through the use of technology they can rely on wherever they may be.

    He explained that from a technology and engineering standpoint, the primary purpose of VivoBook is to provide completely intuitive touch experiences optimised for Microsoft Windows 8, stressing that touch is much more than just a feature: it is the very essence of the VivoBookexperience.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Electronic banking, electronic frauds

    Electronic banking, electronic frauds

    With the introduction of electronic banking, many thought that frauds would become a thing of the past. How wrong they are. Bank frauds are rising more than ever before despite the coming of mobile money, Automated Teller Machines (ATMs), among other electronic banking products. LUCAS AJANAKU reports.

     

    THE Managing Director, SO4 Engineering Services, Soji Oluwasuyi, will not forget in a hurry what happened to him about four years ago when he lost money through the automated teller machine (ATM).

    According to him, he withdrew N20,000 from a branch of his bank on Idimu Road, a Lagos suburb and headed for the Island to fix an electrical fault for a client.

    “I was on top of the roof when a text message (alert) came to my mobile phone. When I opened it, it was a transaction alert that N40,000 had been withdrawn from my account in Gbaja Market. That was the first time I will hear about the existence of a market bearing that name. I screamed and someone told me it was somewhere in Yaba area or so. I was shocked because I still had the ATM card in my breast pocket. The following day, I rushed to my bank to complain and I was given a piece of paper to write a petition. I did that but that ended the story,” he said.

    He was just one of those who lost money to the ATM fraud that rocked the industry during the formative years of its adoption. The situation has since changed with the introduction of fraud-resistant technology in ATM cards.

    Deputy Governor, Banking Supervision, CBN, Tunde Lemo, said ATM fraud has gone down tremendously to about 98 per cent.

    But it is against the backdrop of previous experience and the fact that Nigerians are smart that a recent report of the global information technology (IT) security firm, MWR InfoSecurity becomes relevant.

    Mobile banking on Android phones could put consumers at risk of fraud and cost banks millions a year, MWR InfoSecurity warned.

    MWR Labs, the research arm of MWR InfoSecurity, investigated the security standards of leading Android mobile phone brands to determine the exposure to risk of consumers who use mobile devices phones for online banking, Mybroadband, noted.

    According to a recent research, Android is the leading phone platform with over 50 per cent market share, driving the development of mobile banking apps for the Android ecosystem while results indicated that on some handsets, as many as 64 per cent of manufacturer-added applications or apps were exposing users to serious security issues.

    Commenting on the development, Managing Director, MWR, South Africa, said: “We found that while banking apps were generally well written and had very few security issues, the integrity of consumer phones was often compromised by software provided by the phone manufacturer or additional software added by the network provider, exposing online banking customers to potential fraud.

    “Some of the leading Android handset manufacturers are already looking at shipping mobile devices with native near-field communication (NFC) payment functionalities but if the software in the phones is not secure, the risk will then be even higher.”

    According to him, the increasing number of merchants migrating to smartphone based Point of Sale (POS) devices, by using Bluetooth or directly connected chip-and-pin accessories for iPhone or Android, for example, is symptomatic of the fact that mobile phones will become a critical element in the payment chain, warning that if they are not adequately protected, they could introduce additional risks for card fraud that could cost banks millions a year.

    These findings were illustrated by the ruling on HTC by the Federal Trade Commission in the United States of America on February 22 that directed that HTC take immediate action to address security weaknesses in the software developed for its mobile devices that allowed location tracking and the theft of personal information stored on users’ phones.

    According to MWR Labs, six classes of potential vulnerabilities in apps and packages in the leading brands and mobile phones were looked at using a modified version of Mercury, its security testing framework, to automatically scan the devices and identify security weaknesses, adding that it discovered security vulnerabilities in software added by phone manufacturers or network providers which could be targeted by a malicious application inadvertently downloaded by the user.

    The report added that these weak apps often have more permission that allow them to access contacts, make telephone calls and even record the content of those calls, meaning that the potential consequences are serious and sensitive data could be compromised in the process.

    Other apps were also discovered that allowed further apps to be installed with an arbitrary set of permissions, essentially leaving consumers fully exposed to fraud.

    “The move by consumers away from PC’s for online banking to mobile platforms will inevitably be followed by the criminal gangs who have been successfully targeting online banking for years. We have already seen many examples of malicious apps sending premium rate text messages and expect there will be a natural progression to higher value areas such as payments and banking,” Grobbelaar said.

    Managing Director, New Horizons, Tim Akano, warns that the banking industry will be the target of attack this year. According to him, hackers will compromise the network of the lenders and sell data for profit.

    The warning notwithstanding, mobile money has continued to face some challenges in the country leading to its sluggsih uptake.

    Managing Director, Parkway Projects Limited, Uzor Eziukwu, disagrees. He said the uptake has not been slow, adding that it would take sometime before the initiative would be stabilised in the country.

    Parkway is a leading provider of home grown e-banking and e-payment solutions in Nigeria and reaching out to the rest of Africa

    “I don’t agree that it has been slow and sluggish. Generally, financial services have their life cycle. We have the same experience with ATM cards, which took about three years to pick up. We are just one year into mobile money or mobile payment, the response is ok but there are challenges like infrastructural challenges but it is still (in its) early days, we will get all these things sorted out,” he said.

    According to Visa Incorporated and Fundamo, the Visa-owned mobile money platform, while the market has potential to lead the world in mobile money, only 35 per cent of the citizens are aware of mobile money

    A study by Visa revealed that only 35 per cent of respondents were aware of mobile money versus an average of 56 per cent across all six of the emerging markets surveyed.

    According to the study, there were 110 million mobile subscribers in Nigeria, but only 56 million of them have bank accounts, making it one of the most exciting mobile money markets in the world because of its huge potentials. The report noted: “Consumers’ needs for financial services are far more sophisticated than previously believed and go well beyond the established transaction set offered by mobile money services today.”

    The Visa study suggested that the success of mobile financial services was determined by how deeply a mobile money provider understood its customers and tailored the service to their needs as well as those of mobile money agents from service menus to marketing and education.

    To raise awareness and drive adoption, it said providers needed to educate consumers on the key benefits and uses of mobile money services, whilst tackling barriers to uptake. According to the study, 83 per cent of respondents in Nigeria cited “safety of not having to carry around a lot of cash” as the primary benefit of mobile money, adding that the greatest barrier to adoption in the country was whether those money was sent to would know how to receive it.

    A mobile payment expert, Emmanuel Okegwale, identified mobile banking application interoperability as a key challenge in developing a sophisticated mobile payment system in the country. “The single reason for this is the manner in which mobile phone applications evolved over time, device manufacturers focused on particular standard and this led to a proliferation of applications. The financial regulator, CBN, should look into this issue at this early stage so that mobile banking ecosystem can be robust with national standard that cuts across banks. “Bank-specific mobile banking platforms is akin to having each bank deploying its own ATM technology which other bank customers cannot access,” he said, adding that interoperability can also help to evolve a standard that will enable low end phones, which are excluded, to do mobile banking.

    He said apps distribution for mobile banking is another area where some banks are facing challenges. According to him, while some forward looking banks are overhauling their gateways and reducing their reliance on mobile operators’settings to enable customers’ phones, others are actually asking that customers come with regular operator settings, which in many instances, might not be correct configurations settings.

    Analysts say mobile banking holds the solution for the CBN’s financial inclusion strategy. They, therefore, urge stakeholders in the ecosystem to find a way round the security challenge.

     

  • How to curb cable theft, by telecom chief

    THE vandalism of metro terrestrial optic fibre cables can be curbed by using aerial optic fibre cables, the Head of Business Solutions and Sales, Phase 3 Telecom, Otuya Okecha, has said.

    Speaking after receiving the ‘Best Telecommunication Broadband for Education Award’ at the Eighth Titans of Tech Conference and Expo Award in Lagos, he said embracing aerial fibre optic fibre cables is a bulwark against vandalism of cables and its attendant disruption to service delivery.

    He explained that with its strategic positioning of optic fibre cables over high tension power lines for broadband penetration with high speed and great connectivitity, it would be difficult to for vandals to wreak havoc on the cables.

    He said firm has made remarkable expansion in the provision of bandwiddth to companies and schools across the country, adding it is the first indigenous company to deploy fibre optic cables in the country.

    Okecha said the company has areial fibre optic cables covering over 4500km, adding that with the placement of the telecoms infrastructure, are not vulnerable to vandalism.

    He reiterated the firm’s committment to services delivery, especially in the provision of excellent bandwidth for the development of the country’s educational sector to generate and harness the huge potentials inherent in technologically-driven education sector.

    “We will continue to champion the adoption of a very active and sustainable e-learning system that is at par with global standards. This informed the choice of we made in focusing on the promotion of e-learning in schools. We will also take active role in the development of sports which has a huge potential to engage the nation’s youthful population,” he said.

    “e-learning is key to the knowledge economy. We will continue to support the educational sector in the country through the provision of bandwidth to make teaching and learning more exciting for students not only to excel in their academic pursuits but to have the needed confidence and intelligence to compete with their counterpart on the global scene,” he added.

  • Minister, Dabiri-Erewa seek support for girl education in ICT

    Minister of Science and Technology Prof.Ita Okon Bassey Ewa has called for the education of girls in information communication technology (ICT) so that they could actualise their dream and compete with their counterparts in other parts of the world.

    The minister, who spoke at the Girls ICT Day celebration convened by a group, Women in Technology (WITIN) in Lagos, pledged his ministry’s support for girl-child education in building science and technology innovation so that they can achieve their goals.

    House of Representatives Committee Chairman on Diaspora, Hon. Abike Dabiri-Erewa, said the event, which was set aside by the International Telecommunications Union (ITU), would help develop girls in the world of ICT and prepare them for future leadership position.

    She promised to liaise with the chairman, House Committee on Science and Technology to meet with WITIN so that the two could synergise to support the girls child initiative in ICT.

    She charged girls to be focused in their dream to achieve their set goals, adding that the girl-child education initiative should be encouraged at all levels.

    The President of WITIN, Mrs Martha Alade, said the workshop was aimed at encouraging girls into ICT to compete favourably with their counterparts in other parts of the world.

    She, however, said only 23 per cent of women has access to internet in sub-Sahara Africa, adding that WITIN plans to go to the rural areas to educate people about ICT.