Somalia's
ambitions online could
bring Mogadishu
to the world
By Jonathan KalanMogadishu, Somalia
Charcoal-powered coffee machine - living in a
recovering failed state
like Somalia means being innovative
At The Village
Restaurant, a popular open-air hangout for Mogadishu's returning diaspora
community, a charcoal-powered Italian espresso machine brews Somalia's best
cappuccino.
Wi-fi internet beams
throughout the cafe, as patrons check email, download music videos, and keep
tabs on Somalia's latest news.
As Mogadishu shifts
from two decades of civil war to a quivering democracy, opportunities for
business - from hotels to off-grid espresso makers to cafes like the Village -
are flourishing. And so too are the opportunities for bringing them online.
Perched between the
tattered ruins of a flattened landscape, the glow of wireless receiver antennas
has gradually replaced the orange glow of stray bullets, bringing a new era of
global connectivity and freedom of information to the city's estimated one
million residents.
In 2000, Somalia was
one of the last African nations to get online. Since then, the internet
industry here has seen as much turbulence and turnover as the country itself.
Many Somalis and people of Somali descent who
have been living
outside the country as part of the global diaspora community
are
returning to the troubled state to open new businesses
According to
Abdulkadir Hassan Ahmed, general manager of Global Internet Company, Somalia's
largest internet provider, at least 17 internet companies in Somalia have gone
under in the past decade.
Global Internet
Company, founded in 2003 by a consortium of Somalia's leading telecom companies
including Hormuud and NationLink, provides dial-up, DSL and some point-to-point
wireless.
Yet even Mr Ahmed
admits his own company's connections can be slow and expensive. After nearly 10
years in business, Global Internet is almost profitable, he says, but is more
of a loss leader for telecoms.
Unlike Somalia's
thriving telecoms sector, where two decades of lawlessness, lack of regulation,
and cut-throat competition for an increasingly mobile market have driven services
up and prices to rock bottom (less than one cent per minute), internet in
Mogadishu has been archaic.
Dial-up is the
cheapest option, at around $30 (£18) a month per computer, but is painfully
slow - less than 56kbs - and highly oversubscribed, according to many.
Internet penetration in Somalia still stands
at just 1.14% of the population
- but as the infrastructure improves that is
expected to rise sharply.
Direct satellite
subscriptions cost as much as USD$3,000 per month for one-megabyte connections,
and can be unreliable.
'Top dollar'
Yet with increased
security, things are turning around.
"People used to
complain that 'Mogadishu has no internet'," says Liban Egal, an
American-Somali and founder of Somalia Wireless, Mogadishu's newest wireless
internet provider.
"It's not that
there wasn't internet," Mr Egal explains, "It's that you couldn't get
what you wanted out of it."
Somalia Wireless,
which launched in April, hopes to find the middle ground in this Mogadishu
market, by offering both pooled (shared) and dedicated connections.
"We are trying to
build an infrastructure for internet connectivity in Mogadishu," says Omar
Osman, Somalia Wireless' chief executive, by first "focusing on
organisations and institutions that can pay top dollar" and eventually
moving down the pyramid to offer a broader base of customers cheaper, faster
and better internet.
Mustafa Yare and his brother Ali Hassan's
business is doing well
- welcoming around 40 customers per day
According to Mr Osman,
Somalia Wireless' hotspots now cover nearly 40% of the city, connecting
universities, NGOs, hotels, news agencies and cafes. The company broke even
last month.
Internet penetration
in Somalia still stands at just 1.14% of the population - on par with
Afghanistan - but demand in Mogadishu is growing rapidly.
"Demand is
increasing by the day," says Mr Ahmed. In today's Mogadishu, he says you
need internet "like you need food".
For the burgeoning
private sector and a youth finding themselves free from the social constraints
of al-Shabaab, connecting the city is key for growth. Local entrepreneurs are
already taking advantage of Mogadishu's new broadband access.
A report by Somali
Telecommunication Association (STA), in 2006, stated that the country had more
than 234 cyber cafes, growing at a rate of 15.6% per year. One can only guess
the number in Mogadishu today.
Computer Science students at Benadir
University
use the web to work on learning assignments
In September, brothers
Ali Hassan, 20, and Mustafa Yare, 22, opened Kobciye Internet Coffee, a
sweltering tin-roofed internet cafe with eight computers, and a deal from
Somalia Wireless.
They are part of a
shared wireless "pool" with nearby offices, and their bandwidth
increases in the afternoon when offices close.
"I wanted a
business," Mr Hassan says, "and this is something that I'm good at, I
have skills in computers and IT."
Youth unemployment
stands at 75% in Somalia, so any job is a good job.
The cafe costs around
$600 (£373) a month to run, with electricity accounting for nearly half of
expenditure. Still, the brothers managed to eek out just under $1,000 (£624)
from their 40 or so daily customers - enough to keep things running for another
month.
Most people, Mr Hassan
says, "come for Facebook".
Facebook has taken off
in Somalia since Islamic militants al-Shabaab fled the city several months ago,
loosening social restrictions and making the streets safer.
New accounts have
grown by 50% in the past six months, and there are now more Facebook users than
estimated internet users in Somalia, thanks to mobile phones and computer
sharing.
Safia Yasin Farah, a
young Somali-Canadian who now works with the Centre for Research and Dialogue
(CRD) in Mogadishu, says Facebook allows Somalia's youth to express their
opinions freely, without being afraid.
"Many are
illiterate, but are actually learning through Facebook," she adds.
As in much of the world, Facebook is one of
the most popular destinations
for Somali web surfers visiting the Kobciye
Internet Coffee cafe.
Young ambition
Dr Abdirizak Ahmed
Dalmar, president of Benadir University, one of dozens of private universities
in the capital, recalls his first day teaching in Mogadishu a few years ago.
"When I finished
my first lecture, one student came to me and said 'can you give me your email',
another one said 'which website can I go on'.
"And then I saw
them playing with their mobiles, Facebook pages, etc. I know these youth have
the same aspirations as any youth anywhere in the world. They just need the
opportunity."
With donor funding
Benadir University set up its own satellite system, with facilities for
video-conferencing with partner universities abroad.
But six months on,
that funding has run out, and Benadir cannot pay the $3,000 per month fee. So a
deal was struck with Somalia Wireless, who have installed a receiver antenna on
their roof.
'We are ready'
For Mogadishu,
wireless broadband is just the beginning.
A few hundred
kilometres off the coast three fibre optic cables, already fuelling Kenya's
tech boom, lie waiting to be connected.
But security has been
an enormous challenge. With pirates still controlling the seas, no one has been
willing to cover the cost of insurance to bring the cables to Mogadishu.
Many of Somalia's
telecom companies are hedging their bets on the future of fibre in Mogadishu.
"In the next six
months, we'll start building the local loop for fibre," says Mr Egal.
According to him, it will cost around $1,500 (£936) per kilometre in Mogadishu,
an investment he's willing to make.
Mr Ahmed, of Global
Internet, says his company's involvement in fibre depends on how the government
regulates it.
"If there's room
for private sector," he says, "we are ready."
Sam, an Kenyan engineer with Somalia Wireless, installs a wireless
receiver antenna on top of Benadir University.
Yet it is a risky
investment.
Somalia's first real
government in 22 years is now being tested, and though Mogadishu's long-time
residents and returning members of the Somali diaspora alike are incredibly
optimistic, the city has virtually no infrastructure, and still very little
regulation.
Even without
government support, however, Somali innovation, like an espresso maker designed
to foil the city's power outages, will help the city lurch forward.
"The more peace
we get", Somalia Wireless's Omar Osman explains, "The bigger and more
advanced technology we can offer to our people."
And high-speed
internet, even more than espresso, will help stimulate Mogadishu's recovery.
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