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  • The handbook for 1,000 telecentres in Rwanda to be launched soon The handbook for 1,000 telecentres in Rwanda to be launched soon
      Juriaan Deumer from the Netherlands and Paul BARERA, Executive Director of Rwanda Telecentre Network (RTN), have just completed the handbook for 1,000 telecentres in Rwanda. This book, developed with the support of CTA (Technical Centre for Agriculture and Rural Cooperation), provides details...
    25 August 2010
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  • Consultative workshop for deployment of 1,000 telecentre in Rwanda
    Rwanda Development Board (RDB) in partnership  with Rwanda Telecentre Network (RTN)  is organizing a one-day consultative workshop which will take place on 20th August 2010 at Hotel le PRINTEMPS in Kigali. The workshop is supported by the Technical Centre for Agriculture and Rural cooperation...
    13 August 2010
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  • Deploying 1.000 telecentres in Rwanda Deploying 1.000 telecentres in Rwanda
    An update from the Rwanda telecentre Network Based in a small town in Rwanda, south of the capital Kigali, the owner of the Nyamata telecentre – Paul BARERA  – has taken up an ambitious plan; to deploy 1.000 telecentres in Rwanda before the end of 2015. During the months July and August, he...
    06 July 2010
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A Rwanda vastly innovative attempt by the Rwandan government to take information to the ordinary citizen will see the introduction of ICT buses in the tiny East African country this month. An initiative of the eRwanda Project, the ICT bus will act as a mobile telecentre to help bridge the digital divide affecting the rural population of Rwanda. An ICT bus will be a mobile computer lab that will benefit farmers, traders, students, women, youth groups, entrepreneurs and other rural based Rwandans. According to the eRwanda Project Coordinator Wilson Muyenzi, the ICT Bus will take ICT services to rural communities where there is no electricity. “Each of the buses that are now being assembled in Nairobi will have a file server, personal computers and other ICT services that will seek to take information closer to the ordinary citizen,” he said.

This initiative is spearheaded by the government of Rwanda which seeks to actively transform the country from an agrarian economy where over 90 percent of the working population depends on subsistence agriculture to a knowledge-based one. It is also envisaged that the availability of appropriate ICT infrastructure will mitigate the barrier to market entry for many businessmen whose main boon to trade is lack of access to information, hence boosting private sector development.

 

“We have put in place one telecentre in each of the thirty districts of the country and every centre will have up to 50 computers,” Muyenzi said. “At these telecentres, we will offer Rwandans basic access to the internet and in addition, there are training clubs for computer literacy and English lessons in line with the government policy to popularise the language.”

 

They are currently 12 fully functional telecentres which offer services like printing, internet and money transfer while 18 bigger ones are set to become functional in July 2009. At the telecentres, farmers will also have access to a library which has mainly a digital section and a smaller physical book library.

Therefore, the ICT buses come to complement these telecentres by offering these services in a more versatile manner. The ultimate target will be to allow greater public access to information and make credible timely information available to all citizens, as well as providing all services in an efficient and cost-effective manner on an online basis. Eliza Murorungwere, an Internet Café attendant in Gitarama, 22 miles from Kigali, welcomes this new government initiative and believes that ICT buses will generate more interest in the internet to their benefit.“

People would be happy to know that the government wants them to use the internet and after initial contact with these buses, I am confident that more people will seek our services.” She said. Evariste Munyaneza too is excited at the prospect of the internet coming to him instead of the other way round. “This will open more opportunities for my children who are keen to listen to my experiences at the telecentre but have no chance of using computers themselves.”

The ICT Bus project comes hot on the heels of other innovative ideas that have been nurtured from inception and brought to the light of day through the eRwanda project. These include the telemedicine project whose pilot phase has enabled doctors from two upcountry hospitals to benefit from scarce but available specialist ediagnosis from the national referral hospital (remote diagnosis done by an expert who access patients file through a high-tech ICT system) followed by etreatment.

Among others the esoko project will enable farmers to access commodity prices in different prices of Rwanda so that they can take their produce to a market where they will make the best profit.

Source: The Independant [accessed 15-07-2009]

Written by :
Koda Traoré
 
Comments (3)Add Comment
0
Rwanda set to launch ICT buses with telecentres
written by Ruud, October 02, 2009
On 22 September the BBC News published an Audioshow on these buses in 'Connecting Rwanda'.

The BBC News Audioshow can be viewed here: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/spe...268374.stm.
0
Rwanda set to launch ICT buses with telecentres
written by Dean, September 28, 2009
Good news for Rwanda. These kind of innovations are good for Africa. Rural access has been very challenging to may countries and hope the project will benefit many people.

We nearly introduced a mobile internet for rural communtities in Zambia. The idea was mooted from Limpopo Northern Province of South Africa. However the project could not take off as we resorted to fixed community infrastructures; telecenters.

keep it up Rwanda,

Dean
0
Good news !
written by nkurunziza, August 04, 2009
That's a good news Koda.
At BYTC, we are trying to implement this kind of project but aiming especially secondary schools of Burundi. We are talking with some local partners in order to get a bus ( or a lorry).
This vehicle will be equiped with a VSAT antennae and and laptops into.
The project will offer ICT training services and Internet services.
We had experimented the project since 2006 in secondary schools in Bujumbura. But now that the security climate is better, we want to extend it in real rural areas with this vehicle.
We hope to learn much from this project eRwanda. This will be facilitated by the fact that Rwanda is really a neighbouring country of ours.

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