"One Dollar a Month for a Wireless Nepal"
TO BUILD WIRELESS BROADBAND INFORMATION HIGHWAY ACROSS NEPAL
Dear Friends
I am Mahabir Pun and I have been invited to attend the ANA (Associations of Nepalese in Americas) Convention 2008 being held in Baltimore, Maryland as "The Distinguished Guest." I have accepted the invitation with pleasure and hope to see all of you there. Today, I am going to request all the Non-Residence Nepalese for $1 a month support for the next five years to build a broadband information highway across Nepal.
For the last 15 years I am working in the mountains of Nepal as a social worker. In 1993, I helped to start a community school, Himanchal Higher Secondary School in Myagdi district. With the school as the center for implementing development projects I am involved with education, healthcare, nature conservation, income generating programs and other community works. Along with the local village community I am moving ahead with a goal to build a 4-year college in our mountain village by 2015 and eventually a university later on.
In 2003, Himanchal Higher Secondary School formally started a project called the Nepal Wireless Networking Project under its management committee. Its purpose was to build long-range wireless networks using Wi-fi technology in the mountain villages of Myagdi, Kaski and Parbat districts. We received technical support from foreign volunteers for this project. The wireless project has gotten significant exposure in the international media because of its simple and low cost approach to connect rural areas and provide education, healthcare, and communication services. With the technical support of Nepal Wireless Networking Project, the wireless network has been replicated on smaller scale by organizations in Makawanpur, Dolakha, Lalitpur, Palpa, Bajhang, Achham, Ilam and Solukhumbu districts of Nepal. Even if it is progressing at a slow pace, we are moving ahead with a definite goal to provide the benefits of wireless technology to 80% of people living in the rural areas of Nepal.
As recognition of introducing information and communication technologies in the Himalayan villages, I was awarded the Ramon Magsaysay Award 2007, the highest such honor in the Asian Region. I was also awarded an Honorary Degree; Doctor of Humane Letters, from my alma-mater the University of Nebraska in 2007. I wish to thank all volunteers involved with me, as it is recognition for all of them.
Our goal is not just to bring Internet to the rural areas as we have found that the contents available in English language on the Internet are not much useful for ordinary villagers. But, we want to provide maximum benefits of the wireless technology to the people of rural areas, regardless. To meet our goals we have been working with several institutions and organizations that are providing the following assistances;
- Develop educational contents in local language for school children and rural people.
- Provide telemedicine services from city hospitals to rural clinics.
- Initiate remittance service in villages to help people working abroad send money
- Start local e-commerce service through e-bulletin boards to help villagers sell products.
My only agenda for this trip to the US is to launch "One Dollar a Month" campaign to build wireless broadband information highway across Nepal. I want to connect as many villages as possible and provide supplemental services as mentioned above. Therefore, I would like to request various individuals and Nepalese organizations across the world to contribute and help run the campaign. My target for 2008 is to have 15,000 members signed-up with the campaign. We want 50,000 members in 5 years. I urge you to donate at least $1 a month for five years to give his priceless gift to the Nepali people, who live in remote areas and are cut off from outside world. You are also welcome to donate more than $1 a month if you wish
REQUEST FROM MAHABIR PUN
Posts 24 REQUEST FROM MAHABIR PUN ON BEHALF OF THE PEOPLE OF NEPAL FOR
ONE DOLLAR A MONTH
"One Dollar a Month for a Wireless Nepal"
TO BUILD WIRELESS BROADBAND INFORMATION HIGHWAY ACROSS NEPAL
Dear Friends,
I am Mahabir Pun and I have been invited to attend the ANA (Associations of Nepalese in Americas) Convention 2008 being held in Baltimore, Maryland as "The Distinguished Guest." I have accepted the invitation with pleasure and hope to see all of you there. Today, I am going to request all the Non-Residence Nepalese for $1 a month support for the next five years to build a broadband information highway across Nepal.
1. What have we done so far?
For the last 15 years I am working in the mountains of Nepal as a social worker. In 1993, I helped to start a community school, Himanchal Higher Secondary School in Myagdi district. With the school as the center for implementing development projects I am involved with education, healthcare, nature conservation, income generating programs and other community works. Along with the local village community I am moving ahead with a goal to build a 4-year college in our mountain village by 2015 and eventually a university later on.
In 2003, Himanchal Higher Secondary School formally started a project called the Nepal Wireless Networking Project (http://www.nepalwireless.net) under its management committee. Its purpose was to build long-range wireless networks using Wi-fi technology in the mountain villages of Myagdi, Kaski and Parbat districts. We received technical support from foreign volunteers for this project. The wireless project has gotten significant exposure in the international media because of its simple and low cost approach to connect rural areas and provide education, healthcare, and communication services. With the technical support of Nepal Wireless Networking Project, the wireless network has been replicated on smaller scale by organizations in Makawanpur, Dolakha, Lalitpur, Palpa, Bajhang, Achham, Ilam and Solukhumbu districts of Nepal. Even if it is progressing at a slow pace, we are moving ahead with a definite goal to provide the benefits of wireless technology to 80% of people living in the rural areas of Nepal.
As recognition of introducing information and communication technologies in the Himalayan villages, I was awarded the Ramon Magsaysay Award 2007, the highest such honor in the Asian Region. I was also awarded an Honorary Degree; Doctor of Humane Letters, from my alma-mater the University of Nebraska in 2007. I wish to thank all volunteers involved with me, as it is recognition for all of them.
2. What is our main goal of introducing ICT in rural Nepal?
Our goal is not just to bring Internet to the rural areas as we have found that the contents available in English language on the Internet are not much useful for ordinary villagers. But, we want to provide maximum benefits of the wireless technology to the people of rural areas, regardless. To meet our goals we have been working with several institutions and organizations that are providing the following assistances;
- Develop educational contents in local language for school children and rural people.
- Provide telemedicine services from city hospitals to rural clinics.
- Initiate remittance service in villages to help people working abroad send money
- Start local e-commerce service through e-bulletin boards to help villagers sell products.
3. What is my main agenda of this trip to the US?
My only agenda for this trip to the US is to launch "One Dollar a Month" campaign to build wireless broadband information highway across Nepal. I want to connect as many villages as possible and provide supplemental services as mentioned above. Therefore, I would like to request various individuals and Nepalese organizations across the world to contribute and help run the campaign. My target for 2008 is to have 15,000 members signed-up with the campaign. We want 50,000 members in 5 years. I urge you to donate at least $1 a month for five years to give his priceless gift to the Nepali people, who live in remote areas and are cut off from outside world. You are also welcome to donate more than $1 a month if you wish
4. What is our long-term goals and sustainability plan?
You might ask us why we need to build wireless broadband highway and how we can make it sustainable. Let us clarify with some examples.
Nepal has built broadband information highway using fiber optic cable along the East West Highway in the southern belt with the help of the Government of India. Most of the major cities of Nepal will be connected with fiber in future. However, it will be very difficult and expensive to bring fiber lines to villages located on the mountain top and slopes of Nepal because of the terrain. In this scenario, wireless is the best, the cheapest and the fastest options to connect the isolated villages located in valleys, mountains and the Terai to the major cities of the country.
Based upon our experiences in Myagdi and other districts through Nepal Wireless Networking Project, we have the following tentative long term plans.
- Build four major relay stations on average in each district to reach out to villages located on different slopes and corners of the mountains. We plan to provide a minimum of 5 Mbps bandwidth to each village and connect the villages through the relay stations to the fiber highway in the cities.
- Build about eight regional base stations and a central control station with servers to monitor and maintain the network and provide connectivity to rural schools, and businesses.
- Connect the network to government and private hospitals to provide telemedicine service.
- Build a central data center to provide educational, healthcare, agricultural, e-commerce, and e-governance contents in local language for the use of students and villagers
- Introduce VOIP phone services and remittance services immediately in the villages to pay for monthly operation and maintenance cost. And work with public and private partners on district and local levels to make the highway financially sustainable and to introduce services that would be useful for the villagers.
- Work with the government of Nepal for introducing e-governance programs in the Village Development Committees (VDCs). Keep requesting the government for funds to provide computers, telemedicine services, and contents in local language
- Request international financial institutions, such as the World Bank, Asian Development Bank, and UNDP to provide matching funds for the rapid expansion of the networks
Some of you might ask if $1 a month campaign will be able to create enough funds to build the electronic highway all over Nepal. That is an appropriate question. We would like to explain briefly how it is possible to build the highway in the following paragraphs.
The cost to build one major relay station for the highway ranges from US$8,000 to US$ 15,000 depending upon the availability of power at a relay station and the equipment we need to use. The cost for the wireless equipment to connect a village from the relay station is about US$1,000 to US$1,500. It costs from US$1,500 to US$2,000 to buy computers and hardware for setting up a computer lab with five computers and a printer in a rural school or a communication center. Villagers will also buy them from local resources.
With 15,000 supporters we are targeting to enroll this year, it would mean US$180,000 in funding annually. That means in the first year, we can build about 12 major relay stations and connect about 30 villages. If we have 30,000 supporters we can build 24 relay stations and connect 60 villages serving approximately 50,000 people. Think about that. With each supporter committing just one dollar a month, we can get to serving 50,000 people every year, who are seriously disadvantaged in many ways.
Using these metrics, we have submitted a proposal to Nepal Government recently to build wireless broadband information highway covering 19 rural districts of Nepal. The total estimated cost is approximately two million in US dollars. The government is positive about the proposal but has indicated a shortfall in available funds. We plan to ask Nepal Government for matching fund every year for the project, of which we are very hopeful.
Thus, we believe that its' an achievable goal to build a wireless information highway in the rural areas of Nepal. We believe that this is one of the ways we can narrow down the widely talked about digital divide.
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