Development action with informed and engaged societies

After nearly 28 years, The Communication Initiative (The CI) Global is entering a new chapter. 

Following a period of transition, the global website has been transferred to the University of the Witwatersrand (Wits) in South Africa, where it will be administered by the Social and Behaviour Change Communication Division. Wits' commitment to social change and justice makes it a trusted steward for The CI's legacy and future. 

On the transfer, co-founder Victoria Martin expressed her pleasure to see this work continue under Wits' leadership, knowing that co-founder Warren Feek (1953–2024) would have felt deep pride in The CI Global's Africa-led direction. 

As Wits, we honour the team and partners who sustained The CI for decades and look forward building from that strong base. This includes co-founders Warren Feek (1953-2024) and Victoria Martin as well as La Iniciativa de Comunicación (CILA), which continues independently at lainiciativadecomunicacion.com with links to The CI Global site. We are also eager to forge new partnerships and entertain new ideas as we consider how best to contribute to social and behaviour change in our rapidly evolving environment.

If you are joining the International Social and Behaviour Change Communication (SBCC) Summit in Panama, please join Wits and CILA on Monday, 22 June, to share your thoughts and suggestion for the relaunch of the Communication Initiative. We will be in Pacifica 5 from 12-1:25 for the Refuel, Reflect, and Renew Lunch Series: The Communication Initiative: celebrating a driving force for Communication for Social Change and the way forward. We will reflect on the legacy of Warren Feek and family in creating the Communication Initiative, consider the contributions of CI over the years and then turn our attention towards the future in this dynamic session. 

If you are unable to join us in Panama, we still want to hear from you. Please contribute your thoughts by following this link: https://redcap.link/CommunicationInitiative2026 or reaching out to ci_surveys@commint.com

You can also follow the QR Code:

 https://redcap.link/CommunicationInitiative2026

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The Phones Keep Ringing In World's Poorest Country

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Summary

This article begins with the statement, "Somalia is a country in ruins." According to the UN, more than 70% of Somalis live below the poverty line, earning less than US$1 per day. Life expectancy is 48 years. Here, where international relief is largely cut off by civil war, "survival is a full-time occupation." According to trends traced in this article, telephone services in this country are "strangely in order".


Specifically, "Telecommunication now reaches all 83 main districts as well as 18 regional capitals in a place the UN describes as a 'failed state'. "Every week and every month we are setting up telephone centres in a new town and village," says Abdulkadir Diini, head of technical development for Nationlink, one of the biggest telecommunications companies in Somalia."


The author explains this trend by pointing to developments in the Somali history. Namely, the telecoms infrastructure was the first to benefit when returnees from Norway installed satellite-based telecoms links in partnership with Norwegian telecoms company TELENOR. (There were no landlines, so this was the easiest way to proceed). Returnees from Gulf States and America then set up an earth station gateway (a monitor and control system that is used from one remote location to another using a second workstation). Within a few years, that initiative turned into a multi-million dollar business. Another telecommunications venture, Al-Barakaat, then began partnering with the American telecoms company AT&T.


Initially, calls to Europe and America cost US$4 per minute, with rates to other countries reaching US$7 per minute - out of reach of most Somalis. But as more companies arrived and telecommunications spread, prices dropped. Telephone calls from Somalia to anywhere in the world now cost no more than US$0.5 a minute - reflecting a 88-93% fall in less than 9 years. The number of telephone lines operating in the country is estimated to be 100,000 (pop.: about nine million). Although most of the phones are located in the capital city of Mogadishu, they are still more than 10 times the number that were present in 1991. By comparison, Ethiopia had 263,000 lines for 66 million people and Kenya 307,000 lines for a population of nearly 31 million in 2000.


However, the author cites sources who caution that there is an "underlying problem of trying to run an industry without a formal government: since there's no one to regulate and licence the industry or administer tax collection, abuses are rampant. For instance, according to Osman Ali, a switchboard operator in Mogadishu, "Those friends and families who have got lines from the same company can call each other freely...But if you have Nationlink line and want to call your neighbour who is with ASTel you get charged the price of an international call." According to the author, as a result "rich investors prosper, while the poor remain without access. And since there's no tax collection, almost every dollar made by foreign telecoms companies is a dollar that leaves Somalia - this in a country that desperately needs revenue for even the most basic development of infrastructure."


Click here for the full article on the Panos London site.

Source

Article forwarded to the bytesforall_readers list server on July 30 2003 (click here to access the archives).