Yaounde, CAMEROON (Monday July 09, 2018) - Cameroon is determined to become a middle-income
country by 2035. To achieve this lofty vision, it has elaborated a Growth and
Employment Strategy Paper (GESP) with the development of information and
communications technology outlined as a strategic priority.
In its drive to make the country a veritable tech hub and multiply by 50, the number of direct and indirect jobs in ICT between 2010 and 2020, the government has jerked into seriously investing in digital infrastructure.
In its drive to make the country a veritable tech hub and multiply by 50, the number of direct and indirect jobs in ICT between 2010 and 2020, the government has jerked into seriously investing in digital infrastructure.
And for better or worse, China has been shepherding the Central African
nation into its digital future. China’s building
spree of giant projects
funded by Chinese government and banks or whose execution is being carried out
by Chinese companies is conspicuous across Cameroon.
Talk of Chinese intervention in the country and one will readily pinpoint
projects in the likes of the Kumba-Mamfe road, the ongoing Yaounde-Douala
double carriage way, the Lom Panga, Memve’ele and Mekin hydroelectricity dams,
the Yaounde multipurpose sports complex, ministerial buildings in the capital
city, amongst others. But out of sight, the Chinese are also
building Cameroon’s burgeoning digital economy sector which had been lagging
behind as compared to other African countries due to want of network
infrastructure and the high cost of devices to consumers.
Experts in China-Africa relations suggest Chinese intervention in the IT
sector in Cameroon is rapidly growing and has the potential to have a much
bigger impact on people’s daily lives than the billions of dollars of
conventional infrastructure they are constructing.
Internet
Backbone
Few years ago, Chinese company, Huawei Marine, engaged in laying down high
capacity submarine optic fibre cables. Known as
Nigeria-Cameroon Submarine Cable System (NCSCS), the optic fibre cable runs
from Kribi in Cameroon to the Main One landing station in Lagos in Nigeria;
which has been linking Nigeria to Europe since 2012.The submarine cable
network has a speed of 3.8Tbits/s and was put in place thanks to a loan from
the Exim Bank of China.
Cameroonian labourers work on a Chinese project, digging trenches to bury optic fibre cables in the city of Yaounde. Credit: Amindeh Blaise Atabong. |
When the landing
station of NCSCS was being commissioned in Kribi in January 2016, the then
Minister of Posts and Telecommunications, Jean Pierre Biyiti Bi
Essam said “NCSCS will enable us [Cameroon] to have an
alternative connection to the world” and boost the country’s extremely low
fixed broadband penetration, estimated then at about 5 per cent.
Again, in May
2018, Huawei Marine, partnering with China Unicom and Cameroon Telecommunications
(Camtel) began laying the 6,000km-long South Atlantic Inter Link (SAIL) cable
system from Kribi in Cameroon to Fortaleza in Brazil. SAIL which will be the
first cable system to directly connect Africa and South America is modelled
using Huawei Marine’s advanced 100G technology and will have a capacity of
32Tbits/s once completed, officials of the Chinese company said.
“Today, Cameroon
uses about 60 gigabits per second, making us to browse 400 times slower than
when we will be at 32 terabits per second,” says Pierre Paul Njonga,
Coordinator of Cameroon’s National Broadband II Programme. With the
Chinese-built SAIL, Pierre Paul notes that navigating the internet will be much
secure, smoother, easier and faster, bringing about economic benefits.
Huawei has also
been the Chinese company putting in place Cameroon’s lone optic fibre backbone
managed by the state-owned corporation – Camtel, across the national territory.
The optic fibre backbone has connected the different towns of the country,
universities and other public structures. Mobile telephony network service
providers operating in the country, including Orange Cameroun, MTN Cameroon and
Nexttel (Cameroonian subsidiary of Viettel), have had to rely on it to provide
3G/4G mobile internet services to their subscribers.
Made In China
In the last
eight years, Chinese mobile phone manufacturers like
Tecno Mobile, Huawei, Itel, LG, ZTE, Oppo, OnePlus and a myriad of others
have been overwhelming the Cameroonian market with
affordable smart phones, giving thousands of people the incentive to go online
for the first time. Many people have parted company with their well-worn
analogue phones in favour of the android devices fabricated by China.
Akoa Paul, 43, a cocoa farmer in
Muyengue; a small village on the leeward side of Mount Cameroon, said he
acquired his first smart phone in 2014. “I bought the Chinese phone at the cost
of FCFA 24, 0000 [about US$42] from the sale of my produce,” Akoa Paul
disclosed, noting that it was the first time in his entire life he ever
accessed the internet.
A Camtel
technician presents the Kribi landing station of NCSCS put in place by Huawei
Marine. Credit:Amindeh Blaise Atabong.
|
Cameroon internet penetration now
stands at 37.71 per cent, up from less than 1 per cent in 2000, according to the
country’s Telecommunications Regulatory Board (ART). Statistics by the
regulator indicates that over 40 per cent of the close to 18 million internet
users in the country get connected by phone. And the contribution of
Chinese-made phones in achieving this fast penetration rate cannot be
undermined.
The availability of Chinese smart
devices even in remote areas and the affordability by the less privileged has
been changing the lives of many, especially in rural areas. They use it for
their own sustainable development. In Cameroon’s rainforest in the East region,
locals are using cheap Chinese smartphones to take on illegal logging and the
corruption that breeds it. They used the satellite-connected devices to harvest
evidence of trees fell down in restricted areas, and then report cases of
suspicion to forestry officials as well as the anti-graft agency.
In addition, people in the north of Cameroon are using such phones to
fight maternal mortality and climate change, while the Chinese phones are also
serving internally displaced persons in a ‘Cash Transfer’ scheme by mobile
money implemented by the EU Civil Protection and Humanitarian Aid.
Multiple Impact
Besides getting people connected everywhere, the ‘Made in China’ electronic
gadgets have offered hundreds of opportunities to Cameroon’s desperate
unemployed youths. Be they sales persons or repairers, the young people now
have hope thanks to the presence of Chinese smart devices in the Cameroonian
market. At Ancien 3eme; a hotspot for the sale and repair of mobile
phones in the port city of Douala, Laurent Serge Etoga Etoga tells this
reporter “China has changed my life” as he brushes through the chassis of a
Chinese-made phone. “This new-found trade saved me from engaging in the
perilous journey through the Sahara Desert to Europe,” says the young phone
repairer specialized in Itel phones.
Cameroon’s Minister of Higher Education (right) offers a Chinese-made laptop to a university student. Credit: Amindeh Blaise Atabong |
China’s Huawei has stamped its mark on Cameroon’s digital landscape,
being responsible for all the mobile broadband modems in the country. Otto
Akama, a young techie in the city of Buea says their devices make it easier to
sign up to multiple telecoms services. “In fact, the main thing is that their
devices are affordable,” he quipped.
Though Achia Rolence Aka holds China has not provided
any direct assistance to help their emerging tech ecosystem – Silicon Mountain
- in Buea, he however agrees China has been a major player for the growth of
the nation’s digital sphere. “Their partnership with most telecommunications
companies; providing them hardware like modems and base stations, have eased
access to internet,” Achia reiterated. Being an alumnus of the University of
Buea, the computer engineer disclosed that the Chinese company Huawei has a
program with the university whereby students go to China for intensive training
in IT.
According to Wu
Jing, Director of Public Relations at Huawei Cameroon, their company is present
and active in Cameroon because the country is at the heart of Central Africa
and by so has certain advantages. He also cites the talents Cameroonians have in
the use of ICTs and the support of President Paul Biya to position ICTs as the
accelerator of the economy. “Our motivation isto satisfy operators and the
final consumers,” says Wu Jing, who adds that, like other enterprises, they are
still facing many difficulties in doing business in Cameroon.
One Student, One Chinese Laptop
When President
Paul Biya described his country’s youths as “android generation” and later
thought of gifting each registered university student a laptop to enhance
learning and research, he swiftly turned to China’s Sichuan
Telecommunications Construction Engineering Co. Ltd. Even the funds to produce
500,000 laptops for the students in the Chinese city of Shenzhen in Guangong
Province were disbursed by the Exim Bank of China.
Branded PB HEV
(Paul Biya – Higher Education Vision), each of the computers have an Intel
Atom Z8350, Microsoft window 10 system and office 365 software. Jacques Fame
Ndongo, Minister of Higher Education says the gift from the Head of State is to
“assist students connect to the cyberspace to tap the latest knowledge and
enhance their studies and assure success.”
Students brandish their Chinese-made laptops offered by the Head of State, Paul Biya. Credit: Amindeh Blaise Atabong. |
Ayeah Gideon
Gobti, a final year student of the University of Bamenda’s Higher Teacher
Training College, is one of the beneficiaries of the ‘one student, one computer’
operation. He, like other students, says the laptop came at the right time. “It
greatly helped me in the preparation of my final year thesis. I don’t know what
I would have done without it,” Ayeah said.
Another student
in the Ebolowa campus of the University of Yaounde II, who elected anonymity,
said she could not have sourced about FCFA 200,000 (US$ 357) to purchase such a
laptop. Now, she uses it principally to do her assignments and online research,
while she distracts herself with it during leisure moments.
As part of the
e-National Higher Education Network project being put in place by government, Sichuan Telecommunications Construction Engineering Company
is also tasked to construct, equip and commission nine university digital
development centers to facilitate e-learning and e-administration. The
structures will align Cameroon with international digital teaching norms, an
official of the Ministry of Higher Education said.
China’s Engagements
The Asian
country has not relented its drive, when solicited or not, to contribute in
building Cameroon’s digital infrastructure. Cameroon public
service broadcaster, CRTV, has also had to rely on China’s giant provider in television broadcasting industry – StarTimes –
for its digital switch over project. Again, CRTV acquired two state-of-the-art
Outside Broadcast Vans from China to optimally cover the Women Africa Cup of Nations
it hosted in 2016. It technicians have also been trained by the multimedia
company in China.
Officials launch
work to implant submarine optic fibre cables to directly link Africa, from
Kribi in Cameroon, to South America, inFortaleza in Brazil. Credit: Amindeh
Blaise Atabong.
|
Again,
government retained Chinese company Huawei
in 2015 to put in place a telephone number portability project on behalf of
three telecom operators in the country. Though number portability is yet to be put
in use, Huawei has set up a centralised database, trained local technicians on
its management and completed other technical aspects of the project, Wu Jing,
the company’s Director of Public Relations in Cameroon, confirmed.
China, through Exim
Bank, has also loaned Cameroon money to put in place its ‘e-post’ project to
enhance the performance of the Cameroon Postal Services (Campost).
Friends Indeed
While it would be an exaggeration
to give the Chinese government and companies all of the praise for easing Cameroon’s
telecommunications revolution, it would be fair to state they have done better
than any other foreign country. However, China’s all the
time more indispensable role in Cameroon’s ICT sector raises a grave concern.
Work on the 6,000km-long
South Atlantic Inter Link (SAIL) cable system linking Cameroon and Brazil.
Credit: Amindeh Blaise Atabong.
|
Bama Etienne
Cham, an expert in international trade negotiations says since acceding the
World Trade Organisation 10 years ago, China has been the first investor for
outward direct foreign investment. Going by the expert, most of the giant Chinese
companies investing abroad, including Cameroon, are government owned.
Bama holds China
is facilitating Cameroon's digital boom but questions the cost. “Looking at its
sustainability, there is a need to be cautious about the quality and other impacts
of these products [IT devices]. Such trading approach where all, including
services, comes from China without transfer of technology is a serious call for
concern. How do we sustain when we don't have the know-how?”
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By Amindeh Blaise
Atabong an investigative journalist based in Yaounde, Cameroon. He has
reported extensively on cross-border conflicts, civil unrest, elections,
governance and other topics from Cameroon, Central Africa Republic and Nigeria.
This work
was produced as a result of a grant provided by the Africa-China Reporting
Project managed by the Journalism Department of the University of the
Witwatersrand.