This summary is part of a research project carried out between March and October 2006 in support of the International Institute for Communication and Development (IICD), one of The Communication Initiative (The CI)'s partners.
According to this case study, there was only one internet service provider, with fewer than 100 users, in the whole of Mozambique up to the mid 1990s. The country was very much on the periphery of the global information society. Despite this, the Mozambican electorate expected effective information and communication technology (ICT) programmes from the government to assist in alleviating poverty and to put the country on the road to economic recovery. Several developments converged to bring about a favourable climate in the field during the next decade, up to the publishing of this report in 2003: stability of the country, government commitment to national development, exposure to regional and global ICT events and a few ICT champions, including the International Development Research Center (IDRC), who commissioned this report.
The author of this study, Dr. ZM Ofir, explains that the IDRC’s Acacia programme played a pioneering role in entering this high-risk arena. Launched in 1997, it was aimed at the development of ICT in Africa and focused on four countries, one of which was Mozambique. Acacia’s central hypothesis is that ICT will empower communities to take effective control over their own development. The programme looks at a number of different models of community access through facilitating four areas of development: policy, infrastructure, tools, and technologies and applications to stimulate demand at community level. Although Acacia did not directly influence government ICT policy, their design of ICT projects and facilitating of high-level stakeholder consultation indirectly had a substantial influence. These activities included establishment of the Mozambique Acacia Advisory Committee (MAAC) to act as an expert consultant in ICT development, to direct financial and technical support, to fund several pilot projects, and to support advocacy and awareness creation initiatives and research.
The timing of the IDRC intervention coincided with a favourable environment for considering the introduction of ICT into Mozambique. This included the government’s focus on development priorities through the Action Plan for the Reduction of Absolute Poverty (PARPA), a small but well-networked group of key decision makers such as MAAC and the ICT Policy Commission, the keen interest of the President and Prime Minister, early demonstration of the practical benefits of ICT and the government’s commitment to public consultation.