THISDAY

Nigeria to Benefit from UK’s £1.2bn Interventi­on Fund for Digital Inclusion

- Emma Okonji

The government of the United Kingdom (Uk) is collaborat­ing with the Nigerian Communicat­ions Commission (NCC), on how Nigeria will benefit from the £1.2 billion interventi­on fund, set aside by the UK government to create wealth and posterity in selected countries around the world.

To be part of the interventi­on fund, the Nigerian Communicat­ions Commission and the government of the United Kingdom (UK), have agreed to collaborat­e on digital inclusion, cybersecur­ity and capacity building.

The Executive Vice Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the Commission, Prof Umar Garba Danbatta, made the disclosure shortly after he met with a delegation from the UK, who paid him a courtesy visit in Abuja.

The delegation was led by the Senior Private Sector Developmen­t Adviser and Head Digital Inclusion at Department of Foreign and Internatio­nal Developmen­t (DFID), of the UK government, Alessandra Lustrati.

According to Lustrati, “This delegation is here to explore how the UK government can channel a significan­t interventi­on to the tune of £1.2 billion to create wealth and posterity in selected countries around the world.

“And this creation of posterity will leverage on the power of ICT to provide access to unserved and underserve­d areas in the country. The interventi­on is also on cyber security and capacity building.”

Lustrati told the EVC that the UK government was hoping to start the implementa­tion of the interventi­on from as early as April, 2019, noting that the project was deliberate­ly made “country-specific” to enable countries like Nigeria choose the nature of the interventi­ons they desire.

Danbatta had told the delegation that there were 200 access gaps in Nigeria and that the Commission was looking at different rural technology solutions to plug them in two years, as against the 20 years projected.

“With the right rural technology solution, we can do it faster, because at the rate we are plugging the gaps, it will take us about 20 years to conclude. These gaps deprive 40 million Nigerians of access to telecommun­ications

services, out of 190 million.

“The good thing about getting a solution to the access gap problem is that, we know where the gaps are, we have our access gap map, we can actually point out where the gaps are,” Danbatta stressed.

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