By MALUM NALU
I have been following with interest the feedback from the
general public since the launching of the Ambunti-Drekikir
website (www.ambunti-dreikikir.gov.pg) in September this
year.
Since the launching of the website, there have been letters
from far and wide in The National, particularly from people
who said they couldn't access the site.
The problem, as was later pointed out in an explanatory
letter, was that the spelling in the newspaper story was
wrong.
I was one of those who entered the wrong spelling on Google
vainly looking for the website, but when I got the spelling
right, I was able to access the website.
There was also a letter from a government officer claiming
that he and his colleagues were not acknowledged on the
website for all the planning work they did for the
Ambunti-Dreikikir district of East Sepik province.
That all added to the hype generated by
www.ambunti-dreikikir.gov.pg since it was launched by local
MP and Correctional Services Minister Tony Aimo.
And the great thing is that rural Ambunti-Dreikikir - at a
cost of only K10, 000 - now has global exposure as it tries
to sell itself to the world as a potential tourist
destination.
This "bush" area has been like the proverbial tortoise and
beaten many of our "town" electorates to have its own
website.
Ambunti-Dreikikir District is one of the six districts
within East Sepik Province.
Dreikikir sub-district covers and is located wholly on
mountain area.
Ambunti-Mayama covers the Sepik flood plains and mountains
in the Hunstein Range/Frieda and Waskuk Hills.
It takes 45 minutes to travel by Cessna 206 aircraft from
Wewak to Ambunti/Mayama and eight to 10 hours if you chose
to travel by road or river.
The website features almost anything from the district and
East Sepik province generally including its cultures and
traditions, youth activities, development projects, cash
crops, as well as the lifestyle of the people.
Okay, the website isn't that fancy, however, all credit must
go to Mr Aimo for being a visionary leader in this
increasingly-globalised world, in which a massive
Information Revolution is taking place as economies use
Information and Communication Technology (ICT), as a
passport to what economists call the "New Economy".
Mr Aimo said at the launch that the Internet was the latest
and most-convenient medium as an avenue to acquire maximum
global exposure and publicity.
He said his district was considered as a "least-developed"
in the country and his people could not sit back and wait
for "miracles to happen" but to move forward with the
available resources through aggressive promotion and
awareness.
Mr Aimo said this was also one way for his district to seek
assistance from overseas investors and donors for the
district to continue being developed.
"Major corporate organisations worldwide are turning to the
Internet as an alternate and effective marketing tool," he
said.
Mr Aimo said his district was now using the Internet to its
advantage.
He also described the website as a way in which his people
could move on with the changing times into the future as the
Internet had exploded on to the global marketplace as a
powerful business tool.
Our MPs should realise that we no longer live in an age of
typewriters, telex machines, faxes and phones.
Computers, email and the Internet, as well as mobile phones
are the way to go.
In the near future, as wireless networking (Wifi) comes into
play in Papua New Guinea as in other countries, newspapers,
radio and television may also become obsolete.
Each of our 109 MPs should have their own website to share
information with their good voters, the people of Papua New
Guinea and the rest of the world.
I'm sure they all have the money to hire a good writer who
can also serve as a photographer and webmaster to develop
and update the website.
Government departments, statutory organisations,
non-government organisations, sporting teams, provinces,
villages, families, individuals, and many more should also
be looking at seriously building their own website if they
don't already have one in this rapidly-globalising world.
It is, however, quite ironic that the ICT monopoly in Papua
New Guinea held by Telikom, and fiercely protected by our
government and MPs, is a major deterrent to the development
of ICT in this country.
Papua New Guinea will continue to remain light years behind
the rest of the world if we do not jump on the ICT bandwagon
in this globalised world.
The digital divide within PNG is an enormous barrier to the
ability of the people to participate in and benefit from the
digital economy.
Access to Internet, adequate infrastructure, human capacity
building and appropriate policies on ICT are central issues
in addressing the digital divide.
Success in this globalised world is predicated on ICT
knowledge and successful knowledge-based economies will be
based on the efficient and widespread use of ICT by all
sectors within any given country.
If they are not ICT-savvy, they will not receive the
benefits of globalisation and they will be left behind the
rest of the world
•For feedback and comments, email malumnalu@yahoo.com
or SMS 6849763.
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