By MALUM NALU
The Government still seems to have no clear directions for
its Information and Communications Technology (ICT) policy,
if this week's National Budget is any yardstick to go by.
This is despite the Government allocating K20 million
specifically towards the ICT policy in the 2008 National
Budget.
There is no clear indication yet if the ICT monopoly held by
Telikom - particularly in its outdated Tiare Internet
Gateway - will be broken.
As an aside, a couple of weeks ago, I sailed to Salamaua on
the MV Rita and almost everyone on the boat was using mobile
phones at sea to call their loved ones in Lae or around the
country.
Treasury Secretary Simon Tosali, at the National Budget
lock-up which I attended on Tuesday this week, indicated
that mobile phone competition had made a huge contribution
to the growth of the Papua New Guinea economy this year and
would continue to do so next year.
Digicel's entry into the local mobile phone industry to
compete with Telikom and its subsidiary B-Mobile has sparked
a 0.7 per cent boost to the growth of Gross Domestic Product
this year.
During the last six months, Digicel has invested about K450
million in the country and generated 300 regular jobs with
about 4,000 indirect jobs around the country.
It also generated substantial revenue from its sale of
mobile handsets and call credits that went into the local
economy.
The ICT monopoly in Papua New Guinea, exorbitant telephone
and Internet costs, as well as lack of knowledge about ICT
all contribute to the massive digital divide in the country.
The digital divide within the country 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.
Our leaders in Government should know that the greatest
problem the country faces in the area of ICT is the Telikom
monopoly through the Tiare Gateway.
A former Papua New Guinea resident now residing in New
Zealand highlighted this very point in an email to me this
week.
"I was interested to read your views in the online edition
of The National," he said.
"After 17 years in PNG, the online papers are one way to
remain in touch with what's happening there.
"Although you make some good points in that article, there
was no mention of the greatest problem PNG faces in this
area: the Telikom monopoly through Tiare.
"It's all very well to have a limited broadband locally but
the true benefits are achieved with an international
network.
"The tiny 'pipeline' linking PNG with the rest of the world
means outside communications are too slow and their charging
policies restrict most people from utilising them.
"Whilst I am able to implement a VOIP (Voice over Internet
Protocol) solution in my home and talk to friends in UK for
free, I can't use it to reach friends in PNG (unless they
work for The World Bank).
"A caring government would axe the monopoly, allow the ISPs
(Internet Service Providers) to actually compete and enable
the people to use the technology.
"Telikom is a government 'cash cow' and that's the reason
they don't want to open everything up.
"They're billing Internet connections as a toll call
whereas, elsewhere in the world, it's a local call.
"Many people over here (New Zealand) never turn it
(Internet) off!"
Telikom - through the Tiare Gateway - is the only licensed
provider of Internet services in the country.
The four Internet Service Providers (ISPs) - Datec, Daltron,
DataNets and Global Internet - buy their Internet
telecommunications capacity from Telikom on wholesale.
The ISPs in turn sell the service through dial-up or lease
line at hugely-inflated prices.
The Internet growth in the country is limited by the
available bandwidth from Telikom.
University of Technology electrical electronics and
telecommunications lecturer Elias Mandawali says people
within Telikom are not doing enough research into new
technologies in telecommunication systems.
"There is a lot of confusion in the World Wide Web (WWW)
applications of Broadband Internet and the telephony
Broadband Internet offered by the Public Switch Telephone
Network ( PSTN )," he said.
"The Tiare runs on the old 4 kHz frequency and bit rate at
64kbps, which is too narrow for Broadband, and one will find
that the information can be lost or congested.
"We have to educate Papua New Guineas to use the latest WiFi-function
telecommunication networks on the World Wide Web.
"This will enable triplay bandwidth ... and is the answer to
PNG's ICT policy."
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