Sunday, February 13, 2000

Electronic Community Moves West African NGO's into the Information Age

Electronic Community Overview

The allegory is as old as human memory and translates into any culture . . . a father shows his son a stick and asks him to break it, which he does easily. Then he brings forth a bundle of sticks and asks the son to break the bundle. The son is unable. The father’s lesson: in unity there is strength.

In 1998, 24 nonprofit organizations in Nigeria – known as NGO’s, or non-governmental organizations – joined together in an electronic community to enhance their effectiveness. With the help of the Ford Foundation and the Boston-based East West Foundation, they began a journey into the future that today has them communicating with one another and the world on a regular basis.

With few exceptions, they had not ever used a computer or surfed the Net. Yet, they could see the future and knew that despite the divergence in their missions there was an important convergence taking place within the world.  They knew they needed to understand and embrace this in order to effectively carry on under conditions that in most parts of the world might be seen as impossible.

2 years later their dream is finally beginning to bring results. Each organization now has at least 1 computer with access to the Internet. Each organization now actively participates in the Electronic Community – which has become their official name. Each organization has learned to use technology to further its mission and its reach – and to help build relationships that reach across mission to common ideals and dreams. . . economic prosperity, justice, peace, hope.

The Nigerian Environmental Study Action Team (NEST): Now online with its own Website, (www.NEST.org) NEST is rapidly  becoming one of the premier environmental research organizations within Nigeria. Since they established an on-line presence, requests for NEST to participate in strategic alliances to provide in-country research on broader global environmental projects have increased dramatically, not only helping insure NEST’s future but providing valuable insight into global environmental issues for International organizations.

The Farmers Development Union (www.FADU.org ): Numbering more than 1/2 million members FADU had one - rarely used - email address and no access to the Web when the Electronic Community began. Today they use email to communicate between field offices, track loans on their financial accounting software packages and are using computer aided design to develop plans for their new central office building where all work stations will be networked with access to the Internet and integrated with regional offices and the newly established Finance Division destined to provide a profit center for the organization to reduce its dependence on outside sources of funding. Visitors to the FADU Website (www.fadu.org) can even choose to make their philanthropy work for private enterprise by makings an online commitment to provide low interest loans to small indigenous enterprises through FADU’s micro-credit program. 

Girl’s Power Initiative (GPI): Armed only with a commitment to elevate the status of women and the enthusiasm of its staff at the start of the Electronic Community project, GPI now uses the computer and training received through the EC to seek grants, communicate with supporters, send news releases and, most recently, to provide advice and help to other members of the Electronic Community. This past month, the Electronic Community, in its biweekly emailing to members,  featured a tip for sending a fax by the Internet from Ese Amadasun GPI’s technical support person.

These are only some of the success stories of the Electronic Community, which according to former NH Senator Wayne King, director of the project, hopes to become the information and technical support resource & Web portal for NGO’s throughout West Africa. With a fulltime presence on the ground in Nigeria and hopes of adding the same in other countries, King sees the opportunity to use economies of scale and technology to assist NGO’s in West Africa and beyond. Including the establishment of a technical cooperative that provides technical resources that today are unaffordable to the majority of NGO’s in Africa.

“Our pilot technical support cooperative in Nigeria has been incredibly effective”, King said. “Providing semi-annual site visits to each of the participating NGO’s, intended to build technical capacity from the ground up and the vision to utilize technology effectively from the top down in addition to technical assistance with any equipment that is not functioning properly. Additionally we have help desk and Web based support for the organizations to assist them between technical team visits.”

“Our vision,” said Osita Aniemeka, a member of the Nigeria based technical team, “is to demonstrate to NGO’s that they can work together more effectively AND reduce overall operating expenses while continuing to expand services. It’s a tall order, but we are convinced that these organizations are demonstrating that they understand.”  For each of these organizations to hire the kind of technical assistance that the Electronic Community provides through the cooperative would just be out of reach to these organizations. By combining forces with initial funding from the Ford Foundation we are demonstrating that this kind of assistance is affordable and effective. We expect that within a few years these organizations will be putting the technical cooperative directly into their own budgets and funding their own participation.”

For Nigerian-born, and now US Citizen, Dr. Chidi Nwachukwu, the Electronic Community project is a dream come true. . .an opportunity to reach out to the country that he loves in a real and meaningful way. Nwachukwu, a member of the Electronic Community Team, is the President of Uconnet.com an Internet Service provider in Milwaukee, Wisconsin and a digital entrepreneur. He sees the Electronic Community as his opportunity to help his native land reach for the prosperity he knows it can have. “Ethical Leadership and Hope”, says Nwachukwu, “are the key ingredients for creating prosperity in Nigeria. No force is better organized in Nigeria to provide that leadership than the NGO sector. But until now these NGOs have operated as individual entities focusing only on their individual missions. The Electronic Community creates the opportunity for each organization to view itself as part of something larger than its own individual mission. An entity where the whole is much greater than the sum of its parts.”

Kip Bates, Senior Systems Administrator at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and technical guru of the Electronic Community team readily admits that his initial involvement stemmed from an old friendship with college chum King (They attended the University of New Hampshire together). Now, however, Bates speaks like someone on a mission from God. “Technology can help these West African nations overcome centuries of economic marginalization and deprivation,” Bates says. “In just two short years we have seen the evidence of its power and we believe the best is yet to come. As these organizations become more and more comfortable with technology and strive to be more self-sustaining and effective we believe they will have the power to move mountains within their countries . . . whether that means stemming the ravages of AIDS, protecting important ecological resources or providing micro-loans to small business enterprises that would otherwise be without capital, these organizations will work together to change the course of history in Africa.”

None of this success has come easily. The telecommunications and power grid  infrastructure in West Africa alone presents challenges that to others might seem insurmountable. But the Electronic Community Team, with the unflagging support of the Ford Foundation, West Africa and Dr. Adhiambo Odaga the program officer who is the spark behind the Community, have been willing to accept failures as learning opportunities and successes as lessons to build upon and in doing so have overcome the odds that others fear to face.

“We’re not ready to declare victory yet,” said Anddy Omoluabi, a member of the Nigerian EC technical team, “but we are certainly ready to declare that we have something very special – of which we are very proud. There are many miles yet to tread but this journey of a thousand miles is now well on its way.”


News Release
February 2000
Contact: Wayne D. King
603-786-9378