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How is the Internet in Africa: UNESCO launches national assessments for Benin, Senegal and Kenya
In this context, Benin, Senegal and Kenya have completed voluntarily their national assessment ofInternet Universality Indicators (IUI), offering a panoramic picture of the Internet ecosystem in these countries and paving the way for similar assessments in other countries, notably in Africa.These three reports will be launched among a total of 21 countries that are undertaking IUI assessments at the forthcoming Internet Governance Forum 2020 via the UNESCO pre-event on 2 November.

, Senegal and are, respectively, the 2nd, 3rd and 4th editions of the UNESCO Series of national assessments of Indicators of the Universality of Internet, following the 1st edition for . The framework consists of a set of 303 indicators including 109 core ones that aim to assess how well national stakeholders, including governments, companies and civil society perform in adhering to the ROAM principles of Rights, Openness, Accessibility and Multi-stakeholder participation, as well as a number of 79 cross-cutting indicators concerning gender equality, youth, ethical dimensions and sustainable development.
All these national assessment processes examined 109 core indicators and are characterized by a truly inclusive multistakeholder approach. They all started by putting in place the national Multistakeholder Advisory Board to guide and actively support researchers in the completion of the assessment reports, formulating actionable policy recommendations; and organizing a national validation multistakeholder to finalize the entire process. The forthcoming tasks for national stakeholders are to take these recommendations forward to achieve evidence-based policy reform and improvement in the countries.
Regarding recommendations relating to online rights in Senegal, the government is urged to ensure the effectiveness of online privacy protection mechanisms by strengthening the missions (regulation of the collection, storage, sharing and transmission of personal data), technical means and human resources (in terms of online privacy protection specialists) of the Personal Data Commission.
Grace Githaiga and Victor Kapiyo, the lead researchers on the Kenya IUIs report, declared “The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) considers this publication yet another milestone and hopes that it shall be a useful contribution to the development of sound policy, legal, regulatory and technical approaches and responses that shall ultimately promote the development of the ICT sector in Kenya.”
Several other reports are in the pipeline to complete the publication series of
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