fyi Begin forwarded message:
From: "Anriette Esterhuysen" <anriette@apc.org> Date: 29 October 2007 16:44:29 GMT+03:00 To: aPC-forum@lists.apc.org Cc: fibre-for-africa@lists.apc.org, apc.africa@lists.apc.org Subject: [Fibre-for-africa] Statement from CS meeting on African Connectivity Kigali Oct 2007 Reply-To: anriette@apc.org, APC - Private list for use by EASSY Workshop Participants <fibre-for-africa@lists.apc.org>
Hallo all
For all your information.
Attached is a statement developed by APC and partners (CIPESA, AfrISPA, KictaNet, OSIWA, and RERN) held in Kigali, Rwanda on 28 October 2007 prior to the Connect Africa Summit convened by the ITU on 29 and 30 October. Please address queries to Abi Jagun (abi@apc.org) and Coura Fall (coura@apc.org).
Anriette
PS- APC members and partners and friends in Kigali please note we are meeting for dinner at Hotel Chez Lando at 19h30 today, 29 October 2007.
------------------------------------------------------ Anriette Esterhuysen, Executive Director Association for Progressive Communications anriette@apc.org http://www.apc.org PO Box 29755, Melville, South Africa. 2109 Tel. 27 11 726 1692 Fax 27 11 726 1692
The following section of this message contains a file attachment prepared for transmission using the Internet MIME message format. If you are using Pegasus Mail, or any other MIME-compliant system, you should be able to save it or view it from within your mailer. If you cannot, please ask your system administrator for assistance.
---- File information ----------- File: Kigali_mtng_recom291007.pdf Date: 29 Oct 2007, 15:43 Size: 56319 bytes. Type: Unknown_______________________________________________ Fibre-for-africa mailing list Fibre-for-africa@lists.apc.org http://lists.apc.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fibre-for-africa
Eric M.K Osiakwan Executive Secretary AfrISPA (www.afrispa.org) Tel: + 233.21.258800 ext 2031 Fax: + 233.21.258811 Cell: + 233.244.386792 Handle: eosiakwan Snail Mail: Pmb 208, Accra-North Office: BusyInternet - 42 Ring Road Central, Accra-North Blog: http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/eric/ Slang: "Tomorrow Now"