“Everyone deserves to be connected to a FAST Internet — one which is Fast, Affordable, Safe and Transparent. Nowhere is this need more urgent than in Africa, where four in five people remain offline today – with severe implications for democracy, health, education and business. The time to turn platitudes into practical action is now — businesses and governments alike must up their game.”
That’s the message Web Foundation CEO Anne Jellema will be taking to delegates at the World Economic Forum on Africa gathering this week in Kigali. Joined by two African activists, Nanjira Sambuli and Busayo Obisakin, Anne will be delivering the results of the Web Foundation’s #FASTAfrica Week of Action, which took place last week. The campaign saw more than 60 events take place across 20 countries, with thousands of people coming together at parties, workshops, hackathons and more to debate Africa’s digital future and demand change from leaders. Although the campaign’s focus was on offline events, many thousands more joined in online, with tens of millions of impressions generated on social media.
Africa needs Internet that is FAST – Fast, Affordable, Safe, Transparent.
RT if you agree! #FASTAfrica pic.twitter.com/YfmdcbF69O— WebWeWant (@webwewant) May 4, 2016
Anne will be asking the business and government leaders in attendance in Kigali to take three initial steps:
The FAST Africa campaign is a joint initiative by the Web Foundation’s Web We Want campaign and the Alliance for Affordable Internet. You can learn more about the campaign here.
(This blog originally appeared on the Web Foundation site.)