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EAC One Network Area has potential to transform Africa

Saturday April 02 2016
network

That the EAC managed to start One Network Area in less than one year after an EAC Heads of State directive illustrates how African countries really have the potential to make quantum leaps in development. TEA GRAPHIC

Africa, it is often said, is a continent that leapfrogs various intermediary stages of technology. From fixed to mobile telephony, Africa leapfrogged the usual phases of technological advancement.

It does not come as a surprise, therefore, that on a global level, the East African Community is one of few regional blocs that have scrapped mobile roaming charges. And this is just the beginning.

Introduced in October 2014, the One Network Area aims to harmonise tariffs on mobile voice calls, SMS and data transmission within the EAC.

Today, roaming charges between Rwanda, Kenya and Uganda have been removed, making all mobile calls between the three countries local. This has led to a minimum 400 per cent increase in the volume of calls — a direct benefit to EAC citizens and African businesses operating across the region’s borders. Previously, making calls across the EAC was more expensive than calling Europe, America or Asia.

The second phase of the ONA initiative is underway, with telecom operators revising SMS and data charges downwards. Rwanda began this process in August 2015, and the idea is to have a truly integrated regional bloc with all mobile telephony barriers removed.

Compare this with older and more advanced regional blocs in the West or in Asia. The European Union for example, only recently voted new rules that will scrap mobile roaming charges — a reality that will happen in 2017.

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This has taken the EU almost a decade of negotiations and an interim cap on roaming charges is to take effect by the end of April this year, ahead of a phase-out in 2017.

That the EAC managed to start this process in less than one year after an EAC Heads of State directive illustrates how African countries really have the potential to make quantum leaps in development.

Tanzania recently expressed interest in joining the ONA and so has Ethiopia, even though it is not a member of the EAC. South Sudan is already part of ONA.

At the highest political level, regional integration is about bringing people together and creating environments conducive for tangible gains and inclusive growth. I like to think of just how much more the EAC and Africa can achieve with the type of leadership that made the One Network Area a reality.

We are on the brink of a truly connected future. It is this spirit that convened six African presidents to sign the agreement for a One Africa Network, projected to be operational by July, 2016.

This decision was undertaken during a Smart Africa board meeting, chaired by President Paul Kagame on the margins of the Africa Union Summit in January this year. The beauty about broadband is that it isn’t constrained by physical borders or distance.

Connected future

When executed, the One Africa Network will see calling rates across the full continent reduce dramatically. One can only imagine the multiple opportunities for growth, inclusion and development.

It is exciting to look into a future where the EAC’s political will to connect its people will be replicated across the continent.

The EAC one network area, the single tourist visa and the use of IDs for travel in the region are just but a few examples of what is in our means to transform the lives of our citizens for the better, once we commit to it.

What the success story of ONA tells us is that the most intractable barriers are not of physical or regulatory nature, but those within our minds.

Valentine Rugwabiza is Rwanda’s Minister for East African Community.

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