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One more significant and shining chapter in the history of
India-Africa relationship was added, when the Pan-African
e-Network Project was inaugurated on 26th Feb 2009 by Hon’ble
Shri Pranab Mukherjee, External Affairs Minister at the TCIL
Bhawan in New Delhi, amidst the presence of High Commissioners
and Ambassadors of African countries.
With the
commissioning of the Pan-African e-Network Project, former
president Dr. A P J Abdul Kalam’s vision of connecting India
with all 53 countries of the African Union with a satellite and
fibre optic network for sharing India’s expertise in education
and health care, has been translated into reality.
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Describing the Pan-African e-Network Project as a shining
example of South-South Cooperation, the External Affairs
Minister Shri Pranab Mukherjee said that under this project
India has gifted a dedicated satellite hub for e-connectivity in
Africa to help bridge the digital divide. The Project aims to
create significant linkages for tele-education and tele-medicine,
making available the facilities and expertise of some of the
best universities and super-specialty hospitals in India to the
people of Africa.
The Minister added that the project is also equipped to support
e-governance, e-commerce, infotainment, resource mapping and
meteorological and other services in the African countries,
besides providing VVIP connectivity among the Heads of State of
the African countries through a highly secure closed satellite
network.
He said that thirty three countries have already joined this
Project and more are expected to join in the course of the
coming months. Eleven countries have been covered in the first
phase where both the Learning Centres for tele-education and
Patient-end Hospitals for tele-medicine are ready. These
include: Benin, Burkina Faso, Gabon, The Gambia, Ghana,
Ethiopia, Mauritius, Nigeria, Rwanda, Senegal and Seychelles.
The External Affairs Minister assured that nine
more countries namely Botswana, Burundi, Cameroon, Djibouti,
Egypt, Malawi, Mozambique, Niger and Uganda would be covered in
the second phase by March 2009. Another nine countries, namely
Comoros, Cote D’Ivoire, Democratic Republic of Congo, Eritrea,
Sierra Leone, Somalia, Tanzania, Togo and Zambia, would be
covered by the network as part of Phase-III by 30th June 2009.
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The External Affairs Minister had a brief online interaction on
bilateral matters with each of the eleven ministers individually
through the network. While addressing the ministers and other
dignitaries online in eleven countries where the network was
inaugurated today, Shri Mukherjee exhorted the countries to take
advantage of the full range of services offered by India. He
also asked the remaining countries to join the project early.
Citing the success of the Government of India’s pilot project on
tele-education and tele-medicine in Ethiopia, as a precursor to
this mega project, the Minister said that 34 Ethiopian students
are pursuing MBA course from IGNOU since 2007 and would be
completing their final semester in June 2009 which would entitle
them to get the MBA degree from IGNOU without having to move
away from their country. |
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The Pan-African e-Network Project was approved by the Union
Cabinet on 5th July 2007 at a budgeted cost of Rs. 542.90 crores
which covers the cost of supply, installation, testing and
commissioning of hardware and software, end-to-end connectivity,
satellite bandwidth, O&M support, and providing the tele-education
and tele-medicine services to 53 African countries for 5 years.
The Ministry of External Affairs is the nodal ministry for the
project while Telecommunications Consultants India Limited
(TCIL) is implementing the project on a turnkey basis.
The Project aims at providing tele-education services to 10,000
African students to undertake Post-Graduate, Under-Graduate, PG
Diploma and Diploma and skill enabling certification courses in
subjects such as Business Administration, IT, International
Business, Tourism and Finance. The following seven leading
universities and educational institutions of India have been
associated with the Project: Amity University, Noida; University
of Madras, Chennai; Indira Gandhi National Open University (IGNOU),
New Delhi; Birla Institute of Technology and Science (BITS),
Pilani; University of Delhi; IIT Kanpur and Indian Institute of
Science (IISc.) Benguluru.
As part of the tele-medicine services, online medical
consultation will be provided for one hour every day to each
participating African country for a period of 5 years in various
medical disciplines such as cardiology, neurology, urology,
pathology, oncology, gynecology, infectious diseases/HIV-AIDS,
ophthalmology, pediatrics etc. Twelve leading Indian Super
Specialty Hospitals have been associated with the Project. These
are: Apollo Hospital and Sri Ram Chandra Medical College and
Research Institute in Chennai; AIIMS, Escorts Heart Institute
and Moolchand Hospital in New Delhi, Fortis Hospital in Noida,
KEM Hospital in Mumbai, Care Hospital in Hyderabad, Amrita
Institute of Medical Sciences, Kochi; Manipal Hospital and
Narayan Hrudayaylaya, Benguluru and Santosh Hospital, Ghaziabad.
With the commencement of the tele-medicine services, some of the
best medical specialists of India would be available for
consultations online for the African patients.
Another important element of tele-medicine services is the
Continuing Medical Education (CME) in various specialties which
is intended to update the knowledge and upgrade the clinical
skills of the practicing physicians and paramedical staff in the
African countries.
TCIL has established the network with a data centre in TCIL
Bhawan, which acts as a gateway to the hub station in Dakar for
connectivity of Indian institutions to the African sites.
More details on the project can be obtained from
the website www.panafricanenetwork.com .
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