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Chinese technology company Huawei last week delivered the second phase of an internet backbone infrastructure measuring 1,380 kilometres to take the total amount of fibre optics so far laid in the country to 1,548 kilometres.

The second phase of the project comes more than four years after the first phase of a US$106 million National Data Transmission Backbone Infrastructure (NBI) and the Electronic Government Infrastructure (EGI) was commissioned in 2007.

The final phase, whose works commence in January 2012, 307.2 kilometres of fibre laid from the Uganda capital, Kampala to the Rwanda border to complete a fibre link from the Kenyan port town of Mombasa.

The second phase has linked Uganda to neighbours Kenya in the east and South Sudan to the north.

Phase one, which was dogged by technical as well as financial problems linked all government departments and agencies.

James Saka, the executive director of the National Information Technology Authority Uganda (NITA-U), the IT regulator said the project will help lower the cost of Internet bandwidth for Government and targeted user groups such as schools, universities, hospitals and research institutions.

He said the 24 core cable, which transmits 2.5 gigabytes with potential for upgrade to 10 gig will provide high speed internet bandwidth to support information technology enabled services such as Business Process Outsourcing (BPO).

It will also enhance efficiency and effectiveness of service delivery to the citizens of Uganda through electronic transactions such as e-taxation, e-health and e-learning.

Saka said the NBI will improve collaboration within government through services such as unified messaging, support the digital migration process by providing auxiliary infrastructure for the transmission and delivery of digital television signals.

The facility will also facilitate business transactions nationally and internationally through the adoption of E-commerce.

Government is set to tender out management of the second phase of the project to a private operator who will ensure 24 hour availability of the network.

The minister of information and communication technology, Dr. Ruhakana Rugunda said a share of the funds raised by the private manager who will lease capacity to the private sector will be used to maintain and develop new routes of the network.

In a directive that will likely hit revenues of private telecoms operators, President Yoweri Museveni has directed that all ministries and agencies that are connected on the network should use it as their primary infrastructure for voice, data, Internet and e-mail.

Rugunda said that when commercialization of the backbone is finalized, it will be possible to deploy services such as video-conferencing, Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP), unified messaging and collaboration services, which can allow sharing of data across government.

"Other priority interventions to optimize use of the NBI/EGI will include bulk purchase of international Internet bandwidth capacity for priority targeted user groups, establishing a shared ICT services platform (Government "cloud") for hosting all existing and future e-Government applications," Rugunda said.

The infrastructure will also help in establishing what he called public key infrastructure to facilitate secure e-transactions, and support BPO or IT-enabled services including incubation and training.

Already, five ministries including that of defence and foreign affairs use applications like video-conferencing and VoIP.

The entire project is funded by a concessional loan from the export/import bank (EXIM) of China. Uganda has to pay back the loan over a period of 20 years.

The Chinese government sourced and recommended Huawei Technologies to carry out the project works.

The Uganda NBI is part of an East Africa-wide terrestrial fibre optic cable which will when complete cover 15,600 kilometres linking the five countries of Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania, Rwanda and Burundi.

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Autor(en)/Author(s): Edris Kisambira

Quelle/Source: East African Business Week, 17.10.2011

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