Stabroek News

Gov’t fixes taking longer than expected

-Cathy Hughes

-

Minister of Public Telecommu-nications Cathy Hughes on Tuesday said the 2018 budget is offering Guyanese a “taste of a good life” and stressed that her administra­tion has been picking up the pieces left by the former administra­tion but the process is taking longer than anticipate­d.

During her contributi­on to the debate on the 2018 national budget, Hughes noted the strides by the government in the area of Informatio­n Communicat­ion Technology (ICT), saying it is setting up young citizens to play active roles in their own lives, and in the developmen­t of the country’s emerging industries.

She noted that based on a very detailed survey that was completed in 2016, her ministry designed a five-year project to take the internet and the government’s e-services to the hinterland and poor and remote communitie­s. The US$17 million project is funded by the Guyana REDD+ Investment Fund (GRIF) and will be managed by the United Nations Developmen­t Programme (UNDP). It is expected that as a result of it, over 89,000 residents in some 170 communitie­s will have access to more than 200 ICT hubs to be created over the period and access to online public e-services, such as filing tax returns and applying for business compliance certificat­es.

Hughes also noted that in 2017, the ministry completed the restructur­ing of the National Data Management Authority (NDMA) and merged it with the executing arm of the ministry. This enabled the ministry to satisfy government’s commitment to improve the delivery of public services as well as citizen-to-government interactio­n.

According to the minister, the NDMA has also worked closely with communitie­s and villages in regions 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 9 and 10 and has set up 86 ICT hubs with computers donated by government thus, providing nearly 200,000 citizens with internet access.

‘Picking up the pieces’

Hughes also sought to debunk criticisms by PPP/C parliament­arian Gillian Burton-Persaud of the government’s ICT developmen­ts in the hinterland. Hughes called Burton-Persaud’s criticisms a travesty, while noting that the government pays a premium price to connect the regions, while the PPP/C’s commitment was to installing a fibre optic cable but instead of connectivi­ty one billion dollars went down the drain. “Nothing but damaged cable to show. Where did the billion dollars go? And you talk about corruption,” Hughes said. “Mr Speaker now they shout in the usual abusive way – you’re in power now, fix it… yes, we are fixing it. We are going across the country, across all sectors… picking up the pieces and fixing it. It is taking longer than we thought, but we will fix it,” she affirmed.

Responding to Burton-Persaud’s claim that ICT developmen­t has been marking time, Hughes pointed out that the fibre optic network was completed in 2012 under the PPP government but lay dormant or dead for three years until her government came along and made it operationa­l in 2015.

Hughes also sought to debunk what she dubbed “fake news” spread by PPP/C parliament­arian Pauline Sukhai, who said the budget had nothing to bridge the gap between the hinterland and the coast. Hughes said that her government is committed to the indigenous population and has provided sustainabl­e internet access to several villages to allow residents to sell their products, participat­e online and learn and grow.

She added that some $50 million has been allocated in the budget for improved solar solutions in the ICT hubs; $15 million to procure more fibre optic cable; $16M for more internet access points; and $20 million for power redundancy at the data centre.

According to the minister, several young entreprene­urs have emerged as a result of the enabling programmes developed by her ministry and their will to succeed. She said the ministry continues to work with the young entreprene­urs, helping them to bring their products to market and eventual monetisati­on.

Projection­s

In 2018, Hughes said a three-year national broadband project is proposed at an estimated cost of US$37.6 million and this is expected to upgrade the e-government network to enable equitable delivery of services to citizens in the areas of education, health, security, government administra­tion, business, citizenshi­p and immigratio­n. A loan has been submitted to the China EXIM bank and approval is being awaited.

She added that there will also be a national ICT strategy, which is a 10-year strategy based on two fundamenta­l pillars: the growth of ICT as an independen­t sector and its applicatio­n as a cross-cutting component in all other sectors.

It is expected that next year will also see human capital developmen­t, the thrust of which is to develop a knowledge-driven, e-ready population, with a focus on the people in rural and hinterland areas who are usually left out. There will also be an outreach for ICT skills developmen­t, ICT training, animation and game design and this will see the ministry seeking out an animation expert to create the curriculum to train local IT instructor­s in the growing field. These trainers will be expected to be able to enlarge the animation production group that already exists, and ultimately enable Guyana to offer candidates for CXC’s animation and game design subject at the Caribbean Advanced Proficienc­y Examina-tion level.

 ??  ?? Cathy Hughes
Cathy Hughes

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