Proposed activation of fixed broadband in each
district reached by the Palapa Ring, resulting in a dramatic upgrade of the
network speeds of local governments, schools and universities, banking systems
and microcredit programs, the public health system, the central government’s
citizens-facing institutions, mosques and warnets. It entails the creation of a
smart device and powerful apps that will produce a mobile broadband and fixed
broadband ecosystem, which enables individual citizens and institutions to
interact with great impact.
While the world was focused on the Asean summit in Brunei
last week, wondering what the leaders of the region would do about the South
China Sea, something else, also of great importance, was taking place
elsewhere, first in Bali and then in Jakarta.
The Bali part of it was the meeting of the APEC
Telecommunication and Information Working Group (TEL), composed of the
telecommunication and information technology ministers of 21 countries, which
is now updating its strategic plans.
You don’t hear much of APEC TEL because when APEC is
mentioned, you think of the Bogor Goals, which form a large part of the APEC
story. Since the Bogor Goals of free and open trade and investment were adopted
when Indonesia was chair in 1994, APEC economies have increased their trade
volumes six-fold. Their GDPs each year have risen half a percent higher than
the rest of the world. That’s big.
APEC TEL’s part of this story is also big but isn’t well
known. Established in 1990, APEC TEL would shepherd the transition of the Asia-Pacific
information infrastructure into an Asia-Pacific information society. Since
2000, APEC economies have reached the goal of tripling Internet access. They
are now striving for universal access to broadband by 2015.
When APEC officials talk of connectivity, however, they talk
of shipping, road networks, railway links and power systems — which are, of
course, vital forms of connectivity. But the revolution of the future will not
be any of these. It will be meaningful broadband. “Meaningful” because it’s
affordable, accessible and empowering.
In Indonesia there’s a movement to leapfrog the country into
massive broadband deployment. Guiding this movement are Dr. Ilham A. Habibie, a
leading light in the aviation industry; presidential aide Wim Tangkilisan; and
Craig Warren Smith of the Bangkok-based Digital Divide Institute.
Chairman, managing director and adviser respectively of the
Meaningful Broadband Working Group, they interacted with APEC TEL in Bali.
I understand that after this interaction several APEC members, including China, Japan and Malaysia, are moving to make meaningful broadband a cross-cutting theme for the APEC Economic Leaders’ Meeting later this year.
Then in Jakarta late last week, Ilham Habibie and Wim
Tangkilisan led a meeting of stakeholders in the Indonesian broadband movement,
including the cabinet secretariat, senior government officials and
representatives of civil society and the academe. The meeting received Smith’s
240-page Meaningful Broadband Plan to make broadband a platform for Indonesia’s
socioeconomic and environmental reform. The movement is now going over the plan
prior to submitting it to President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono at the end of May.
The plan envisions the activation of fixed broadband in each
district reached by the Palapa Ring, resulting in a dramatic upgrade of the
network speeds of local governments, schools and universities, banking systems
and microcredit programs, the public health system, the central government’s
citizens-facing institutions, mosques and warnets. It entails the creation of a
smart device and powerful apps that will produce a mobile broadband and fixed
broadband ecosystem, which enables individual citizens and institutions to
interact with great impact.
The program will be piloted in Pekalongan on the north coast
of Central Java before it is extended to 200 others connected to the Palapa
Ring. Its impact is expected to be immense in the delivery of good governance
and in the fight against corruption, in education and in every economic activity.
It will not only increase GDP. It will bring about social equity.
It will be up to Yudhoyono when the plan is presented to him
at the end of May — whether meaningful broadband remains an idea that must wait
for its time, or he makes it the heart of his legacy.
Jamil Maidan Flores is a Jakarta-based writer whose
interests include literature, philosophy and foreign policy. He is an English
language and writing consultant of the Indonesian government.
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