On a stifling day in May, 1993, two and a half tons of an unidentified
chemical substance were found near a railway station in Karachi, Pakistan.
A warehouse owner, thinking the material might be useful for something,
picked it up. He and his driver died soon afterwards from inhaling toxic
fumes. The local police then impounded the material, dumping it into the
already polluted Lyari River.
When the story was reported by the press, it caused alarm. The
International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN), which had
assisted the Government of Pakistan in producing a National Conservation
Strategy, took the lead in demanding the safe disposal of the material. It
was removed from the river and a sample of it tested under IUCN's auspices
in a well-known chemistry research institute. The substance was identified
as meta-dinitrobenzene, a highly toxic, potentially explosive chemical.
Neither the government nor the NGOs involved had any idea how to
disposal of this material, or even how to handle it safely. So IUCN
contacted its partner organisation, the Sustainable Development
Networking Programme (SDNP Pakistan), recently established in the capital,
Islamabad, to promote the use of Information Technologies in support of
sustainable development. SDNP's infrastructure was not yet in place, and
no one in Pakistan had access to either email or the Internet. All SDNP staff
could do was dial long distance to a commercial, store-and-forward Bulletin
Board System in Lahore, 250 kms from Islamabad. Their message was an
SOS appeal for information and expert advice addressed to two Internet
conferences, or newsgroups: en.toxics on PeaceNet and en.alerts on
EcoNet, on the Association of Progressive Communications (APC)
network.
The response -- both through fax and e-mail -- was overwhelming! More
than 50 individuals and organisations responded to the highly technical
query with concrete suggestions and offers of help. There were responses
from places as diverse as Brazil and Finland, New Zealand and Switzerland,
in addition to the US, the UK, and Germany. Respondents included leading
organisations, experts in related fields, students and concerned individuals,
and Pakistani expatriates.
Some of these individuals searched commercial databases to retrieve useful
information, while others sent comprehensive fact sheets covering the
properties of the substance, how to handle it, its known effects on human
beings and possible ways of detoxification and disposal. All this
information, which poured in for more than a week, was enough to compile
a small book. And it provided ample guidelines for the safe incineration of
the material outside the city.
A four-part partnership
This incident demonstrates why UNDP has set up a global chain national
SDNPs in 40 countries as a means of helping countries fulfill the guidelines
of Agenda 21 and promote sustainable development. It also underscores
the wisdom of IUCN's management which made SDNP an engine of
Pakistan's National Conservation Strategy.
The partnership with IUCN has been a central feature of SDNPK since its
inception. "Our idea was that there should be freer flows of information
and more -- also better -- information on development and the
environment," says Dhunmai Cowasjee, head of the Communications Unit
of IUCN Pakistan. "So when UNDP first spoke about the SDNP project,
IUCN was very willing to become a partner and manage the project." IUCN
Pakistan receives a management fee of 10 percent of the project budget
from SDNP funds.
As a result of the safe disposal of the toxic material in 1993, IUCN was
asked to prepare a protocol manual for Pakistan's civil administration, using
the information SDNPK had gathered. And for the fledgling SDNPK, faced
with the task of "waking up" the country to the benefits of Information
Technologies (IT), the dumping of this chemical proved to be a blessing in
disguise. The crisis and its safe resolution were widely publicised in the
media, and SDNPK won recognition overnight.
During the initial phase of the project -- January to June 1993 -- funding in
the amount of US $60,000 was channeled from UNDP directly to IUCN, as
project manager. A portion of this amount was even carried over into the
second phase of the project, which lasted from February, 1995 to July, 1996.
During this second phase, UNDP contributed US $225,000, while an
additional US $225,000 came from Canada's International Development
Research Centre (IDRC).
Paul Oquist, head of the Governance Unit at UNDP Pakistan, has been
involved with SDNP since the early days. "SDNP was the pioneer in e-mail
connectivity in Pakistan," he explains. "It literally played an historic role in
that regard. The transparency that can come from open access to
information is an important step in Pakistan's efforts to attain greater
accountability in public affairs."
David Balson was Senior Programme Specialist at IDRC at the time, and had
himself been a pioneer in trying to promote email and networking in support
of development and research activities since the early 1980s. "At that time,
most people in the North -- development professionals and donors --
thought it was inappropriate to invest development money in such a
programme," he says. "But in the South, NGOs and some of the poorest
countries were the most receptive to exploring the use of email in support of
their activities." The technology was seen as a means of overcoming some
North-South inequities and building empowerment through better access to
information and broader participation in regional and global activities.
By the early 90's, programmes such as UNDP's SDNP had come on the
scene, and IDRC agreed to collaborate with SDNP, says Mr. Balsom, largely
because of the strengths of the other partners. "There was a very
supportive UNDP Resident Representative, a dynamic NGO, IUCN, to
manage the project, and a very capable Project Leader," he explains."It was
an ideal situation, and I think the project has played a significant role in
advancing networking in Pakistan."
Dhunmai Cowasjee of IUCN is also enthusiastic about the ways in which
SDNP has helped support her agency's goals, such as the publication of
IUCN's monthly, Urdu-language, environmental magazine on SDNP's
network. "This project that has gone much further than we originally
envisaged," she says.
Starting from zero
When SDNPK started working in Pakistan in 1993, there was an IT vacuum
in the country which SDNP had to address if the project was to function at
all. "Pakistan was lagging behind in electronic networking services," says
Hasan Rizvi, National Co-ordinator of SDN Pakistan. "The reason was the
monopoly of the Pakistani carrier, the government-owned PTT." During
SDNP's first year of operations, an opportunity presented itself to address
this problem directly.
In 1993, SDNPK helped prepare a policy paper for the Information and
Communication Committee of the Prime Minister's Research and Analysis
wing. The paper recommended the privatisation of data communications in
Pakistan. "The Prime Minister must have liked our argument," says Mr.
Rizvi. Within a year the government opened data networking to the private
sector. "That was when Pakistan made a big leap in getting Internet
services. Today, there are more than 30 ISPs operating in the country."
Simple, inexpensive technology
At the beginning, with no IT infrastructure in place and all of Pakistan to
work with, Mr. Rizvi found instead that the most economical and simplest
option was to set up store-and-forward UUCP nodes in major cities of the
country. Email was exchanged via a dial-up link with SDNP headquarters at
UNDP in New York. This did not involve major capital outlay, nor did it
require state-of-the-art technology. According to Mr. Rizvi, it involved
"one or two computers and two or three phone lines and modems in our
office, first in Islamabad, then in the other cities as well."
He says that one of the reasons for the reliability of SDNP's services,
especially in the beginning when there were no online services available in
the country, was the support received from SDNP headquarters in New
York. All international mail addressed to Pakistan, and all mail from Pakistan
to international channels, was exchanged via a single call each time. The
system almost never failed. This kind of diligence earned SDNP a reputation
for providing the most reliable email service in the country. "Until the end
of 1996 when big ISPs came in with online Internet service, SDNP was by
far the largest network in the country. Even now it is one of the biggest,"
says Mr. Rizvi.
A UUCP node was installed in Islamabad in March, 1994, in Karachi and
Lahore in March, 1995, in Peshawar near the Afghan border in December,
1995, and in Quetta, capital of Baluchistan, in August, 1998. SDNP has a
total staff of nine to run these four operations, with IUCN directly managing
the Karachi node. By March, 1999, some 5,000 organisations and
individuals around the country had email and Internet access through
SDNP Pakistan, which translates to a total of 15,000 to 20,000 individual
users. Even in "backward," sparsely-populated Baluchistan, there are 220
links to the Quetta node.
Networks of stakeholders
During its pilot phase, SDNP came up with a blueprint for a multi-sectoral
information network of key implementors of sustainable development, an
idea which, given the newness of IT in Pakistan, Mr. Rizvi describes as
"rather grandiose." Called the Business, Education, Research and
Development Network, or BERDNET, the system was designed to provide
information and discussion networks for individuals active in these and
other sectors. To set up the network, SDNP conducted an information
needs survey among organisations and individuals involved in sustainable
development activities, some of whom were already members of the IUCN
network in Pakistan. There were nearly 30 such organisations and
individuals, including environmental and other NGOs, women's groups,
policy institutes, government agencies, private businesses and
consultancies, who soon formed the nucleus of SDN Pakistan's clientele.
The careful establishment of this network of key stakeholders proved to be
far more effective than a more traditional marketing approach. "We did not
market our services," says Mr. Rizvi, "but somehow these services came to
be known through word of mouth. Once you have a critical mass, people
just start clustering towards you."
Apart from special workshops for bigger organisations, such as the
Pakistan Agricultural Research Council (PARC) and the Pakistan Library
Association (PLA), basic training was imparted mostly at the SDNP
premises. Short, customised sessions were arranged for clients weekly. To
create awareness about Internet technologies among the general public, a
weekly seminar on email and the Internet was held from March, 1994 until
September, 1997. More advanced training was conducted almost entirely
through email, including two tutorials in the use of the Internet. More than
500 people took part in the second tutorial, which took place in 1997.
Mr. Rizvi plans to launch direct online services in Islamabad, Karachi,
Lahore and Peshawar by late-1999. Until then, SDNP's services continue to
be provided the old-fashioned way, by the store-and-forward UUCP system
through New York; but since early 1997, instead of expensive international
calls (which SDNP formerly subsidised) the exchanges with New York have
been channeled through the Internet via local calls. Despite the somewhat
antiquated hardware, SDN Pakistan's customers generally find their
services efficient and affordable.
"Apart from global electronic mail and offline Internet services, we have a
number of mailing lists, discussion lists and offline conferences," says Mr.
Rizvi. "SDNPK is the only network in Pakistan which provides a sense of
community to the people who log into our servers." These people, he says,
don't as a rule use SDNP as a means of surfing the Net; the Internet access
rates of other ISPs remain more affordable. But users of SDN get local email
services free of charge, and pay an average of US $20 a month for other
services, based on the volume of messages. And on SDN they find half a
dozen discussion lists and more than 30 conferences and newsgroups on
various topics, ranging from the environment and sustainable development
to women's issues, education, information technology, public health,
economic issues and NGOs.
"For example," says Mr. Rizvi, "Before the Beijing Conference for women,
we set up a special list of Pakistani organisations for women which was
distributed to the subscribers of SDNP." There are also news bulletins from
the Islamabad Stock Exchange and a daily electronic leaflet featuring
advertisements and announcements. A number of distribution lists transmit
several Pakistani publications, newspapers, medical journals, a wire service
and various periodicals -- to the subscribers of SDNP, who can download
them into their computers.
Bilal Naqeeb is a programme specialist with Strengthening Participatory
Organisations (SPO). The NGO has used SDNPK's services since 1993 to
communicate daily with its five regional offices through a network SDNPK
set up for SPO in Islamabad. He points out that SDNPK offers unique
services to the development community. "Even when people use other
servers for their Internet accounts," says Mr. Naqeeb, "They still want to
keep the SDNPK account to be in touch with other development
organisations."
Reaching the masses
Yet the fact remains that the very prospect of ushering a country like
Pakistan into the information age can be daunting. "Even if Internet
services become easily available and accessible," Hasan Rizvi concedes,
"the truth is that most Pakistanis under present circumstances would not be
able to use them, and would not really benefit from them."
Then there is the problem of language, an issue that excludes much of the
population from access to IT. Of the five main Pakistani languages, there is
software available only in Urdu, the national language, and as yet no
standard such as ASCII has been agreed upon, so one kind of Urdu
software is incompatible with another. (Still, SDNP regularly publishes an
Urdu newspaper on its network, in addition to IUCN's environmental
magazine, also in Urdu.) "If we had a standard for web browsing in Urdu,
that would be a big achievement," says Mr. Rizvi.
Another problem in providing IT services to all of Pakistan is the
remoteness and inadequate infrastructure of much of the country. This is
why the installation of a UUCP node in Quetta, the capital of Baluchistan
province, is so significant. Even the many commercial ISPs that now exist
do not serve these areas. "Now that there are more than 30 ISPs in the
country, it would seem that the connectivity problem has been taken care
of," says Mr. Rizvi. "But that is only partially true. Most of these ISPs have
set up shop in major cities, which means that many backward or remote
areas still do not have basic connectivity."
Although Baluchistan is remote in terms of its terrain and infrastructure, its
area is vast, comprising 40 percent of Pakistan. Telephone calls from town
to town in Baluchistan are long distance, and prohibitively expensive. "We
recently signed an agreement with the Primary Education Department of the
Government of Baluchistan to link up their 24 district centers through the
SDNP network," says Mr. Rizvi. "Phone lines are in place, and already six
out of 24 offices of the province's Primary Education Department are linked
together by email. It is expected that soon each centre will have a computer
and modem as well.
Making money
Accomplishments like introducing email to Baluchistan have required
careful financial planning. Early on, SDNP developed a highly effective
system of charging for its services. They charged members of BERDNET no
registration fee, and no monthly fee. Members simply paid a nominal
amount for each international email message sent via the dial-up telephone
link with SDNP headquarters in New York. Those who use only local email
pay nothing at all. When nodes were established in more than one city in
Pakistan, a small fee was charged for messages between cities. "Users pay
for the actual amount of international or inland data they send or receive
though the international channels: the kilobyte of data," says Mr. Rizvi.
"The main expenditure for us is the long distance calls."
Mr. Rizvi describes the financial "balancing act" SDNPK has performed.
"We were trying to achieve a development objective but also wanted our
operations to be sustainable," he explains. The solution was a sliding scale
of rates for different customers. "Rather than confining ourselves to the
so-called development sector, we opened our services to everyone. Our
maximum rates were for the business sector, then the personal users, then
the government agencies. The development agencies and the educational
sector have the most favorable rates. This is an area in which SDNPK has
so far achieved a dramatic success compared to any other SDNP."
He's right. The strategy has not only provided for SDNP during long
periods between UNDP funding cycles, but it has ensured that UNDP's
contribution of US $240,000 for the current funding cycle (October 1998 -
September 2000) will be only about 16 percent of the total budget of US
$1.28 million. The remaining 84 percent will consist of revenues SDNP has
generated, and expects to continue to generate, through the services it
provides. "At one point, our official funding actually ended in mid-1996,
and the new phase of our project started in October 1998," says Mr. Rizvi.
"During this entire period we did not receive a penny of support from
UNDP or any other development agency. On September 30, 1998, when we
went into the new phase of our project, our profits were slightly in excess of
US $600,000."
Present and future
SDNP's current phase of operations is, according to Mr. Rizvi, "rather
ambitious," and involves setting up full online services in Islamabad,
Karachi, Lahore and Peshawar in mid-1999. This means that customers will
have instant access to the Internet and faster, direct email service at
affordable rates. "One thing that we want to do, and that most of our users
would like us to do, is to have fixed volume charges rather than having
them pay per kilobyte," says Mr. Rizvi. "This means we will allow an email
account which can send and receive email up to one megabyte, which is a
huge amount of data, for about US $2 a month. This would take care of all
their email for a month."
An additional, and equally important focus of SDN Pakistan will be to help
improve the quantity and quality of information services in the country.
"This involves working with key government agencies on public domain
information, to help them put that information on the Net, in both English
and, once the standard is developed, in Urdu," says Mr. Rizvi.
These efforts are linked to a UNDP Governance project called the
Government Information House (GIH), still in the blueprint phase, which is
designed to put public domain information from various public agencies on
the Internet. Once mechanisms for its implementation have been worked
out, SDNP expects to use its experience in networking with NGOs to play a
key role in promoting transparency and accountability between government
and civil society. "There would be very good synergy between SDNP
Pakistan and the GIH," says Mr. Rizvi.
Paul Oquist, head of the Governance Unit of UNDP Pakistan, agrees. "The
governance information system will promote connectivity within
government and between government and the people, as well as publishing
government information," he explains. "SDNP can support this advance in
transparency by providing people with information about, and access to,
government and communications with government. For example, SDNP
could circulate information about government programmes to the NGOs in
order to get an even stronger multiplier effect."
A plan for rural telecentres
Key to SDNPK's success has been its partnership with other organisations,
and it seems likely that this tradition will continue. Even though IT is more
and more widely available in Pakistan today, SDNPK still has a distinct role
to play in finding ever new ways to harness these technologies in the
service of sustainable development.
One of SDNP's most faithful users has been SPO, Supporting Participatory
Organisations, which works intensively to strengthen rural
Community-based Organizations (CBOs) in five provinces throughout the
county. The idea now, according to SPO Programme Specialist Bilal
Naqeeb, is to set up telecentres in the remote parts of these rural areas.
"If SDNPK provides the services in the small towns, we can easily establish
the telecentres," he says, barely containing his excitement. "We want to
start in Punjab, where we have some good partner organisations, with
literate people. The infrastructure is also there, so we can just provide the
training and they can start working."
Hasan Rizvi is excited as well, though cautious. "We still need to try it out,"
he says, "and this might take place in the next few months. SPO works with
literally thousands of CBOs, all over the country. We might be able to reach
out first in one of the districts and then maybe, who knows, to a wider
network of such CBOs in Pakistan."
For more info: info@sdnp.undp.org