ABUJA, Oct 7: Accessing the internet in the developing world is unnecessarily expensive, partly due to government policies that hinder competition and should be scrapped, a new alliance backed by Google, Yahoo and Microsoft said on Monday.

The Alliance for Affordable internet, which launched in Nigeria’s capital, said it will push for an “open, competitive and innovative broadband market” to boost access, especially in Africa, where only 16 per cent of the population is online.

Other members of the alliance include the British and the US development agencies, as well as Facebook and the inventor of the World Wide Web, Britain’s Tim Berners-Lee.

“There is simply no good reason for the digital divide to continue,” Berners-Lee said in a statement, arguing that the infrastructure and technology needed to fully connect poorer countries was increasingly in place.

“The real bottleneck now is anti-competitive policies and regulations that keep prices unaffordable. The alliance is about removing that barrier,” he added.

The initiative’s executive director, Sonia Jorge, told AFP that Ethiopia’s telecommunication policy “is an example of exactly what you don’t want to see.” The state operator, Ethio Telecom, holds a near monopoly as a broadband service provider and the cost of connection is among the highest in the world when compared to monthly income, according to the US watchdog Freedom House.

Despite its roughly 90 million people, Ethiopia had only 27,000 broadband subscriptions in 2011. Significant price reductions were announced last year in an effort to boost access, however. The alliance said its goal is to reduce the cost of access to below 5pc of monthly income worldwide.

In developed countries, people in 2012 spent on average 1.7pc of monthly income for broadband while in the developing world the figure was 30.1pc, according to the new group. Prices have gone down in several areas, in part due to infrastructure improvements, including under-sea cables.

Following its Monday launch in Nigeria, the group will begin working in four countries, campaigning for liberal, open-market policies where private firms freely compete to provide lower cost broadband services.—AFP

Opinion

Editorial

‘Missing’ LGs
29 Jun, 2026

‘Missing’ LGs

Across the world, successful civic governance is made possible through effective, responsive local bodies, which are closest to the voter.
Audit or ritual?
29 Jun, 2026

Audit or ritual?

THE AGP’s latest audit report of federal civil accounts is a detailed record of governance failures and...
Al Aqsa under threat
29 Jun, 2026

Al Aqsa under threat

NOT satisfied with the genocidal violence it has unleashed in Gaza, the current Israeli administration is doing all...
Truce tested
Updated 28 Jun, 2026

Truce tested

The latest US-Iran exchange should therefore be treated not as proof that dialogue has failed, but as a warning of how easily it could.
Paper promises
28 Jun, 2026

Paper promises

WHAT is a UNSC resolution worth if it is never implemented? Pakistan and China felt compelled to convene an informal...
Still the masters
28 Jun, 2026

Still the masters

CRISTIANO Ronaldo and Lionel Messi do not seem to be going away quietly. At least, not yet. The duo might have left...