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Freitag, 26.04.2024
eGovernment Forschung seit 2001 | eGovernment Research since 2001

BI: Burundi

  • Burundi embarks on fibre optic to reduce high internet charges

    Internet users in Burundi are expected to pay less if the country's first fibre optic network fetches high-speed and low-cost internet through Rwanda and Tanzania early next year, an official has said.

    Burundi, with the help of the World Bank (WB), is embarking on about 1,300-kilometres of fibre optic to cover all the 17 provinces, the capital Bujumbura and key borders with Tanzania and Rwanda.

    Salvator Niyibizi, the Executive Secretary of the Executive Secretariat for Information and Communication Technologies (SETIC) in the Burundian Ministry of Transport, Posts and Telecommunications says completion of the first phase of the cable is expected in the first quarter of 2012.

  • Burundi Gov commissions Metropolitan Area Nework for Bujumbura

    The Government of Burundi in conjunction with Huawei and Onatel officially commission the Metropolitan Area Network (MAN) project installations for Bujumbura.

    The Bujumbura MAN project is as a result of a grant from the Government of the People’s Republic of China to the people of Burundi. The project shall be installed by Huawei Technologies Company Limited and is to run through the Bujumbura city.

    The aim of the MAN project is to implement basic infrastructure for interconnecting government institutions expecting to carry out various applications to be deployed in the future.

  • Burundi minister bemoans handicaps in telemedicine

    Burundi's minister of Information, Communication and Relations with Parliament, Mrs Concilie Nibigira, on Thursday expressed regret about lack of telephone connectivity in large areas of the country, saying this can limit the access to telemedicine.

    'The high cost of diagnosis, medical equipment and software are the many obsta cles to the penetration of telemedicine in Burundi,' she added.

    Speaking at a workshop to look into the ways and means to popularize telemedicine that focused on access to health cares for rural populations, Mrs Nibigira also stressed the bad quality of the phone network and the lack of electricity as obstacles to telemedicine.

  • Huawei to build fiber networks in Burundi

    The project is funded by a grant from the Chinese government

    Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei and regional network provider Onatel have been commissioned to build fiber broadband networks for the small African nation of Burundi.

    According to IT News Africa, the partners will deploy a Metropolitan Area Network (MAN) across the capital Bujumbura, to be used by the government and public sector agencies.

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