New fiber-optic network brings digital era to Afghanistan
The first overland link to the Internet will drive down prices and bring more opportunities for Afghans, say officials. But security has prevented parts of the network from being finished.
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Afghanistan's minister of communications has high hopes for the country's new fiber-optic backbone. "We are going to bring the cost down to one fifth of what the cost is by satellite," says Amirzai Sangin. He talks excitedly about interest not just from ISPs, but from banks and television stations. "It's like a national information highway, and all who want to submit [proposals] should be able to use it."
Skip to next paragraphThe arrival of a fiber-optic network could entice companies to consider opening call centers in Afghanistan, says Muhammad Aslam, a consultant who has worked on Afghanistan's Internet infrastructure.
Will the new network be enough?
But getting a fiber link won't mean Afghanistan will experience its own dot-com bubble. It may not even rapidly expand Internet users. Some of the most pessimistic voices on this front are the ISPs themselves.
There are some doubts that the network will provide enough bandwidth. Mr. Yousafzai worries that traffic traversing Afghanistan from other countries will use up the available capacity. Mr. Aslam says the ministry should have been more ambitious: "For a 2 percent increase in the cost of the current contract value, we could have had world-class fiber of great capacity."
There's also disillusionment over the price the ministry is offering ISPs for access. One local ISP, Rana Technologies, determined it wasn't worth it. "The cost is more expensive for the fiber than the satellite," says Farhad Ghafoor, Rana's vice president of business development.
Then, too, there's the bigger picture: Internet won't have mass appeal in Afghanistan until there's enough electricity, home PC ownership, and literacy to make use of it. "It's going to grow, but only on the private sector side, not the consumer side," says Mr. Ghafoor. "It will be gradual – not like the US when AOL went up."
Security complicates network completion
The Ministry of Communications had fairly ambitious hopes five years ago – setting a target of 10 percent Internet penetration by now. But it turned out mobile phones became the runaway success story.
Mr. Sangin predicts Web-enabled phone demand, plus lower prices, will get Afghan Internet usage back on track.
The delay, he says, came when the lowest bid for the project was also the least technically proficient. The government eventually chose another company – a Chinese firm – after persuading it to match the lowest bid. But by the time shovels hit dirt, many areas had become too dangerous, leaving sections of the network undone. In Pakistan, just six miles remain to link to the Afghan border, but there, too, security has worsened.
"If we [had] moved faster at the time, the security situation would have been better," says Sangin.



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