As
we land at OR Tambo International Airport on our return from Mauritius, I
cannot help but feel as big as a Baobab Tree.
We left from various parts of the African continent as just seedlings
but now we were all taller and bigger. We were not big from the food we have
been eating at Tamassa Resort, but we are bigger because we are all pregnant
with more knowledge acquired from the African School of Internet Governance.
The
seeds were planted by the call for applications to participate in the 2nd
African School of Internet Governance. Out of the more than 600 applications
from all over the continent, only 45 of us were selected (
http://african-ig-school.events.apc.org/afrisig-2014/class-of-2014/
), who had varying
degrees of knowledge and understanding of Internet Governance. We are the ‘chosen ones’, the flag bearers
for the various countries and institutions we come from. The Tamassa Resort in Mauritius provided the
fertile soil on which the seedlings of Internet Governance were watered.
To
be in the same room as, and listen to Mr Nii Narku Quaynor, ‘the father of
Internet in Africa” who is a living and human library of knowledge, was really
empowering. Same goes for an experienced faculty of thought leaders in the
field of internet governance that walked the journey with us.
By
the second day of the school, we could already see a difference in our
reasoning as well acronyms, vocabulary and terminology use. We have learned big concepts like: Multistakeholderism, Net Neutrality, Internet
rights amongst others.
As
we bid each other farewell with other Fellows who will be catching connecting
flights to their countries, the saying; ‘a mind, once stretched by a new idea,
never returns to its original dimensions’ started making a lot of sense. We have an obligation to soldier on and
champion the cause for Internet governance.
As
for me, I already have some fundamental questions that I need to shape the
answers thereto:-
1)
Why does a developing country like South Africa,
which is a member of BRICS, not have a National Internet Governance Forum?
2)
Does the current ICT Policy gazetted by the
Department of Telecommunications and Postal Services address all the pertinent
Internet Governance issues I have just learned about?
3)
Why is the Internet Governance debate not
featuring on annual events like the GovtTech conference as well as the annual
programme of the Government IT Officers Council (GITOC)?
As a
Fellow of the 2nd African School on Internet Governance, the onus
is on me and my South African Fellows to help our country in answering these
questions and many more as well putting Internet Governance on the national
discourse.
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