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SADC INDEPENDENT TELECOMMUNICATIONS AUTHORITY

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Title: SADC INDEPENDENT TELECOMMUNICATIONS AUTHORITY


1
SADC INDEPENDENT TELECOMMUNICATIONS AUTHORITY
  • PRESENTER Z. NTOZINTLE JOBODWANA
  • DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC, CONSTITUTIONAL, AND
    INTERNATIONAL LAW
  • COLLEGE OF LAW
  • UNISA
  • JOBODZN_at_UNISA.AC.ZA

2
BROAD OBJECTIVES
  • Separation of policy, regulatory and operations
    functions and the creation of regulatory
    agencies
  • ? Liberalization
  • ? Competition amongst network operators and
    service providers
  • ? Granting of a second fixed line license
  • ? Privatisation
  • ? Universal access strategy..

3
DISPARITIES IN REGION (REASONS)
  • Lack of political will to develop ICT Policies
  • legislative framework on paper but not in
    practice
  • lack of awareness by policy makers/legislators
    of impact of ICT policy on market development
  • Absence of clear strategic vision/framework
  • Capacity constraints to support policy
    formulation
  • Inadequate legal structure - not conducive for
    ICT

4
REGIONAL DISPARITIES
  • Conflicting mandate/overlap of regulatory bodies
  • Insufficient Investment - foreign exchange
    restrictions, high Tax levies and import duties)
  • Small market size of many African countries
  • Concentration of infrastructure in urban areas
  • Absence of convergence policy framework on ICT
  • Lack of strategies on e-Commerce
  • Inefficient spectrum utilisation

5
REGIONAL DISPARITIES
  • Inadequate efforts on harmonization of policies
    and regulations at regional and continental
    levels
  • Unavailability of Reliable Statistics
  • Lack of an established mechanism for countries
    to share information and experiences
  • Weak Regional Cooperation/Coordination

6
CONTINENTAL BROAD OBJECTIVES
  • Establish harmonized policy, legal and regulatory
    frameworks at the regional and continental levels
    to
  • create an enabling environment that will attract
  • investment and foster the sustainable development
    of competitive African Telecom/ICT regional
    markets, infrastructures, and to increase access

7
CONTINENTAL BROAD OBJECTIVES
  • Develop African human resource and increase
    awareness to ensure active participation of
    Africa in the global information and
    knowledge-based economy
  • ? introduce relevant and valuable applications to
    encourage the deployment and utilization of
    Telecommunication/ICT across all socio-economic
    sectors in Africa in order to improve efficiency
    and productivity
  • ?

8
CONTINENTAL BROAD OBJECTIVES
  • Promote and develop African content to increase
    global presence of African values, cultures,
    languages and indigenous knowledge
  • Mobilize financial resources by strengthening
    regional cooperation and multi stakeholder
    partnerships and promotion of public and private
    partnerships.

9
CONTINENTAL BROAD OBJECTIVES
  • 1.Establishment of harmonized policy and
    regulatory framework
  • ? Engage highest level authorities to enhance
    political will
  • ? Develop harmonized regional and continental
    strategies.
  • ? Develop regulatory guidelines at regional and
    continental levels.
  • ? Establish mechanisms to strengthen stakeholder
    participation in the harmonization process

10
BROAD CONTINENTAL OBJECTIVES
  • 2. Support to Industrialization, Research
    Development
  • ? Encourage developed software and hardware in
    Africa.
  • ? Encourage research development and
    industrialization of African to develop
    Telecommunication/ICT systems.
  • ? Establish regional common research centres.

11
STRATEGIES TO ACHIEVE OBJECTIVES
  • 4. Development of Integrated Infrastructures and
    Access Networks
  • ? Promote regional and intra-continental
    connectivity.
  • ? Promote open access to infrastructure
  • ? Promote infrastructure sharing.
  • ? Promote digital broadcast infrastructures/networ
    ks.
  • ? Promote infrastructure/networks convergence, in
    particular migration to IP/NGN networks

12
STRATEGIES TO ACHIEVE OBJECTIVES
  • Promote appropriate and innovative technologies
    that can improve universal access/service and
    affordability.
  • Implement technologies/networks that complies to
    internationally accepted and widely spread
    standards, taking into account regional
    interconnectivity and interoperability.
  • Promote African participation in the development
    of standards at the regional and international
    levels.

13
STRATEGIES TO ACHIEVE OBJECTIVES
  • Development of Human Resources and Increase of
    Awareness
  • ? Promote attitudinal change and confidence for
    the adoption of Telecom/ICT in the economy as a
    mode of life.
  • ? Increase Telecom/ICT awareness among political
    leaders and policy makers at the highest level.

14
STRATEGIES TO ACHIEVE OBJECTIVES
  • Increase the pool of African professionals in all
    areas of Telecom/ICT competencies encourage
    their mobility and their retention within Africa.
  • ? Develop mass e-literacy and promote wide usage
    of Telecom/ICT.
  • ? Establish and develop centres of excellence and
    Telecom/ICT research institutions, and promote
    effective cooperation among them,

15
STRATEGIES TO ACHIEVE OBJECTIVES
  • ? ? Establish and develop institutions for
    capacity building for Telecom/ICT at various
    levels, particularly for regulators and policy
    makers.

16
STRATEGIES TO ACHIEVE OBJECTIVES
  • 5. Development of Telecommunication/ICT
  • applications
  • ? Encourage the deployment and utilization of
  • Telecom/ICT across all socio-economic sectors
  • with focus on priority areas e-Government, e-
  • Education. e-Commerce, e-Health, e-Culture.
  • ? Build confidence in the development and use of
    Telecom/ICT applications, taking into
    consideration better management of the
    cyberspace, from the producer as well as from the
    consumer point of view.

17
STRATEGIES TO ACHIVE OBJECTIVES
  • ? Promote the development and use of open source
    software, and build applications on such
    platforms.

18
STRATEGIES TO ACHIEVE OBJECTIVES
  • 6. Development of African Content
  • ? Preserve the African heritage in digital
    format, and its relevant Intellectual property
    rights.
  • ? Encourage the creation of African content in
    diverse languages.
  • ? Promote global presence of the African
    heritage, cultures, and indigenous knowledge

19
SADC ICT POLICY
  • Pursues and deepens SADC integration agenda to
  • Achieve economic growth
  • Accelerate poverty reduction
  • Achieve sustainable development and
  • Attain regional integration and development
    goals.
  • The harmonization of policies, legislation and
    regulations.

20
MEMBERS PARTICIPATING
  • Angola
  • Botswana
  • Democratic Republic of Congo
  • Lesotho
  • Malawi
  • Mauritius

21
MEMBERS PARTICIPATING
  • Mozambique
  • Namibia
  • South Africa
  • Swaziland
  • Tanzania
  • Zambia
  • Zimbabwe

22
GOALS OF REGULATORY AUTHORITY
  • promote network development and universal service
  • promote customer service improvement
  • promote human resources development
  • promote service availability to less advantaged
    sectors of the community
  • granting licenses
  • harmonize rules and regulation
  • promoting competition
  • regulating tariffs and interconnection
  • administering frequency spectrum and numbering
  • prescribing technical standards

23
MANDATE
  • Development of Policy Framework and Conducive
    Environment for
  • Investment,
  • Development of infrastructure and services.
  • Quality of service and Services Accessibility
  • Service Affordability

24
ICT-PENETRATION IN THE SADC
  • In spite of its recognized benefits, the
    availability of ICTs in SADC has remained
    inadequate.
  • For example, in SADC in 1998, the penetration of
    personal computers (PCs) was 1.97 per 100
    inhabitants on average and the tele-density was 5
    fixed telephone lines per 100 inhabitants on
    average.
  • In the same period, the world average for
    penetration of personal computers (PCs) was 6.43
    per 100 inhabitants and the tele-density was
    14.26 fixed lines per 100 inhabitants.  

25
DIGITAL DIVIDE
  • The gap is wide and limits SADC's ability to
    develop competitiveness and to effectively
    participate in the global economy.
  • Therefore, effort is needed to bridge this
    digital divide. This gap calls for the design and
    implementation of policies to turn SADC into an
    information-based economy.

26
INADEQUACY OF INFRASTRUCTURE
  • Promotion of ICT entails the availability of
    telecommunications and broadcasting
    infrastructure in both the urban and rural areas,
    along with computers.
  • Special incentives need to be granted to
    potential investors to implement development
    activities and licenses delivered accordingly.
  • Regional initiatives should also be considered in
    achieving national development.

27
UNIVERSAL SERVICE
  • Telecommunications Services are now considered to
    be a basic necessity of all citizens in order to
    enable them participate in the new information
    economy.
  • In the past the burden of meeting the universal
    access was borne by monopoly operators who in
    most countries were government owned.
  • By that time, operators managed to do so, i.e.,
    delivering services to uneconomic areas, through
    cross-subsidies from profitable market segments.
  • (international, long distance services, business
    users and urban).

28
UNIVERSAL SERVICE
  • In the new competitive environment such system is
    untenable/not possible anymore.
  • Government have now to look for other measures to
    meet such objectives.
  • The development of telecommunications
    infrastructure can no longer be taken as a goal
    in itself, but as a catalyst for enabling
    information and communications for everyone.
  • Access to information and communications will
    enhance community participation in social and
    economic development, by providing opportunities
    for learning, acquiring and sharing of
    information and for commercial activities.
  • Universal access/service needs to be redefined in
    the context of the advancement of the information
    and communications sector in the world and the
    new business environment.

29
OBJECTIVES OF UNIVERSAL POLICY
  • Achieve higher tele-density in both urban and
    rural areas
  • Liberalisation - effective market competition in
    the information and communications sector in the
    SADC is the cornerstone for achieving universal
    access/service
  • Affordability telecommunication services should
    be provided at affordable rates
  • Quality of service services provided should be
    of good quality and acceptable standards
  • Geographic access telecommunications services
    should be made available or accessible regardless
    of geographical location
  • Availability telecommunications services should
    be accessible to a larger proportion of the
    population in a country.

30
STRATEGIES FOR ACHIEVING UNIVERSAL ACCESS
  • Promotion of fair and effective competition as a
    fundamental strategy for achieving affordability
    and network development
  • Establishment of Universal Service Fund as
    auxiliary vehicle for the financing of universal
    service / access
  • Imposition of Universal access/service
    obligations on licensed operators to ensure
    delivery of services in under-served areas
  • Encouragement of community participation in the
    provision of telecommunication services
  • Encouragement of local loop unbundling when
    competition is introduced
  • Application of preferential or discounted tariffs
    for achieving good quality access to schools,
    clinics, telecentres or other community access
    centres and

31
DISCOUNTED TARIFFS
  • Discounted tariffs for telecommunications
    services are essential for achieving
    affordability and universal access/service to
    those economically disadvantaged, which include
  • People with physical or other types of
    disabilities
  • Learning institutions in lower income areas, such
    as primary and secondary schools, libraries,
    institutes and others and
  • Health institutions in lower income areas, such
    as clinics and hospitals

32
CHALLENGES
  • Infrastructure
  • It had been proven that with the privatization of
    certain basic services, expectations had not been
    met as the private sector focused on profits and
    not building infrastructure, whilst governments
    focused on social development.
  • There was therefore still a role for governments
    in building strategic infrastructure, as they do
    for roads, rail, electric power and water
    distribution

33
CHALLENGES
  • Tariffs
  • Affordable and reliable communication services
    that will enable economic growth and development
  • The Price of International bandwidth is a
    significant barrier to the national development

34
CHALLENGES
  • Institution
  • Adjust the responsibility of the
    Ministry/Ministries (To address convergence)
  • Telecommunications/information technology and
    broadcasting portfolio.
  • Address the issues of ICT
  • E-governance
  • E-education
  • E-health
  • E-commerce.
  • Mobile commerce..

35
OPPORTUNITIES
  • Market
  • Urge underserved market.
  • Regional integration in an environment dominated
    by open trade.
  • Regional interconnectivity is as critical as
    national interconnectivity.
  • Establishment of private networks, government
    transactions as well as electronic commerce.

36
SADC INDEPENDENT
  • Although it is not a regional regulator CRASA
    plays an important part in harmonising policies
    and best practices.
  • CRASA feeds coordinated recommendations to the
    policy-making structures of SADC
  • CASA organises workshop and meetings where best
    practices are exchanged informally. At a formal
    level, CRASA develops and adopts policy
    guidelines and model regulations.
  • Through common training programmes, CRASA
    facilitates capacity building for its members.
    With enhanced capacity, members are equipped to
    adopt and implement national policies and
    regulations based on the regional models

37
OPPORTUNITIES
  • Harmonisation
  • Regulatory framework for ICT development
  • The Region to be seen as a whole
  • Harmonised policies a regulatory frameworks
  • The multiplicity of networks and service
    providers in an open environment requires
    appropriate equipment and standards to
    inter-operate. This will ensure that information
    flow is adequate to support electronic
    transactions, electronic commerce, and any such
    exchange in society.

38
OPPORTUNITIES
  • Technologies
  • Modern technologies
  • Ease to deploy
  • Decreasing of costs

39
REASONS FOR DISPARITY BETWEEN REGIONS
  • Inadequate political will to develop ICT
    Policies
  • legislative framework on paper but not in
    practice
  • lack of awareness by policy makers/legislators
    of
  • impact of ICT policy on market development
  • Absence of clear strategic vision/framework
  • Capacity constraints to support policy
    formulation

40
REASONS FOR DISPARITY
  • Inadequate legal structure - not conducive for
    ICT
  • Conflicting mandate/overlap of regulatory
    bodies
  • Insufficient Investment - foreign exchange
    restrictions,
  • high Tax levies and import duties)

41
REASONS FOR DISPARITY
  • Small market size of many African countries
  • Concentration of infrastructure in urban areas
  • Absence of convergence policy framework on ICT
  • Lack of strategies on e-Commerce
  • Inefficient spectrum utilisation
  • Inadequate efforts on harmonization of policies
    and
  • regulations at regional and continental levels

42
REASONS FOR DISPARITY
  • Unavailability of Reliable Statistics
  • Lack of an established mechanism for countries
    to
  • share information and experiences
  • Weak Regional Cooperation/Coordination

43
RECOMMENDATIONS
  •  
  • Establishment, through treaty and protocols of
    the SADC Independent Communications Authority
    (SADC-CA).
  • The personnel should be independent of and not be
    appointees of SADC member States governments
    neither should the personnel be drawn from SADC
    related ministries

44
RECOMMENDATIONS
  • SADC-CA will hold quarterly consultative summit
    meetings with SADC telecommunications ministries
    and other relevant bodies, with a major mandate
    to develop and adopt Telecommunications Acts and
    other ICT related rules and regulations.
  • All the functions of the already existing
    telecommunications agencies under State
    ministries, and those of existing so-called
    independent regulatory agencies would be subsumed
    under SADC-CA

45
RECOMMENDATIONS
  • Funding of SADC-CA will come from contributions
    made by SADC member States from each according
    to its means in terms of a certain percentage of
    a States GDP. Consequently all the employees of
    SADC are paid from the fund administered
    exclusively by the Authority.
  • Foreign ICT aid presently enjoyed by respective
    individual States, will in future be directed to
    the exclusive use of the Authority to minimise
    abuse by political leaders and to avoid
    stakeholder capture.

46
BIBLBIOGRAPHY
  • SEE FULLY REFERENCED PAPER PART OF THE CONFERENCE
    PROCEDIBNGS PUBLICATION

47
CONCLUSION
  • THANK YOU
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