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CyberEd is a comprehensive solution that will enable us
to integrate these individual projects into one seamless
program and provide access to millions of students,
teachers and even out-of-school youth in the remote
areas.—Jesli Lapus, secretary of the Department of
Education
Satellite communications solutions (referring to the
cyber education project) may not be a long-term solution
and will require high operating expenditures. . . . A
single-purpose network (CEP) is a waste of valuable
government resources. A more efficient alternative would
be a multipurpose network where VOIP, e-education and
e-government applications can run side by
side.—Technical Working Group Report for ICT, February
28, 2007
THE
“suspension” of the controversial national broadband
network (NBN) and the cyber education project (CEP)
probably signals that these deals with the Chinese
government are dead.
They
should be. It was obvious right after the second day of
hearings that there is no way the government could
justify these deals in financial, technical and moral
terms. The continuation of the hearings will probably
confirm peoples’ suspicion all along—that they are all
questionable deals attended by anomaly and corruption.
On the
NBN, there was actually no need to “suspend” it because
the Supreme Court had already issued a temporary
restraining order. But the “suspension” from Malacañang
signals a political retreat for which there is no
recovery. It’s a political gambit hoping that the anger
and frustration the people feel about this anomaly would
somehow dissipate.
Not only
should the senators continue to sort out the whole NBN
mess; they should also examine the whole package more
closely.
The
CEP’s propagandists are saying that the project suffered
collateral damage from the NBN brouhaha. We don’t think
so. The CEP also carries many of NBN’s original sins: no
competitive bidding, lack of transparency and no
independent technical evaluation. And it involves an
even bigger amount: $500 million, which we are going to
pay in the next 20 years.
If the
NBN is a shark, therefore, the CEP is a probably a great
white shark!
Make no
mistake about it: we are not against an Internet-based
education per se. We believe that the country needs to
upgrade its educational system and Internet-based
education, or something to boost distance learning would
help.
Of
course, in a list of priorities, it’s also a question
whether or not a satellite-based network should prevail
over basic issues like teacher training, curriculum
reform or providing the basic things like books and
classrooms. But this question is secondary to the bigger
issue of whether or not the CEP had also been tainted by
bribery.
Analysts
think this way because the CEP came to the signing table
in China on April 21 despite many unresolved issues.
Even the technical working group (TWG) from the
Department of Transportation and Communications (DOTC)
had been stressing all along that the CEP suffers from
many technical questions. One such issue is the
“overlaps” between the NBN and the CEP that would cost
the government billions of money.
On
February 13 the joint National Economic and Development
Authority-Investments Coordination Committee (Neda-ICC)
and Neda-Cabinet group meeting in Malacañang agreed to
“sort out” this issue. On February 28 the DOTC TWG
released its report, saying the CEP suffers from the
following problems:
§
The
system will use satellite communications (SatCom) which
is expensive. SatCom may not be a long-term solution and
will require high operating expenditures;
§
It’s a
huge infrastructure for a single user, a waste of
valuable government resources;
§
The
operating capability of the Department of Education (DepEd)
is at issue since its core competence is in education
and not satellite communications. According to the
report, the DepEd “cannot change-manage to become a
technology provider as it is beyond its core
competence;”
§
The
DepEd needs connectivity but could achieve the same not
through the Internet but through an Intranet. This
option is achievable through a less-expensive network
configuration; and
§
The CEP,
to establish its own broadband system, is directly
overlapping with the NBN.
And the
recommendation?
It makes
sense to have a single backbone for government VOIP,
e-governance and e-learning. The DepEd may implement its
e-learning programs using the NBN “as provider for its
transmission requirements instead of building its own
backbone using satellite communications.”
In the
March 26 ICC-Cabinet meeting, Lorenzo Formoso, DOTC
assistant secretary, himself admitted that there is an
“overlap” between the NBN and the CEP projects and that
the two are going to be “underutilized.”
Then-Neda
Director General Romulo Neri supported Formoso, saying
the cost of the overlap would reach P4 billion to P5
billion.
In the
same meeting Formoso expressed reservations about the
CEP, saying that the satellite technology to be used by
the CEP “has not been widely used as a main transmission
mode given cost-related considerations.”
So why
did the government push through with the project despite
reservations among the technical guys and the Cabinet?
The
minutes of the March 26 meeting says: “Secretary Neri
noted that the Chinese government’s position [is] that
the NBN and the cyber education project be treated
separately. He added that while the Chinese Embassy, in
a letter, has expressed readiness to show flexibility
should DepEd and DOTC reach an agreement, Secretary [Jesli]
Lapus has already indicated his preference that the CEP
network be dedicated to education. Secretary [Leandro]
Mendoza, he shared, has also expressed readiness to
remove schools as part of the NBN project design.”
That
statement seems to mean that despite serious
reservations from the Cabinet and the technical guys,
the CEP and the NBN should proceed because the Chinese
government wanted them as separate projects; Lapus
wanted his CEP badly no matter what; and
Mendoza
also wanted his own NBN—all with no bidding and no
transparency.
It’s a
classic quid pro quo “for the boys” deal that would make
a few bureaucrats happy at the expense of taxpayers who
are going to suffer a higher debt burden in the next 20
years.
Yes, the
Senate investigation should continue. It should give an
equally critical look at the CEP and let the ax fall on
those who deserve it. |