Cyber-savvy Estonia, an ex-Soviet republic that has embraced information technology with the velocity of a Baltic Sea storm, will now teach other former communist states to do the same
Published:
7 March 2003 y., Friday
The government said it will launch an academy to help other former Soviet states use information technology to provide better government services.
"For us, this is a kind of foreign aid -- our way of being able to help other countries. It's also a way to highlight how far we've come in e-governance and e-business," Estonian government spokeswoman Hanna Hinrikus told The Associated Press. She said the Internet academy is expected to start later this year.
The academy's cost for three years -- US $250,000 -- will be paid by Estonia, the United Nations and the privately held Open Society Institute, Hinrikus said.
Estonia's population of 1.4 million residents took hold of Internet technology after regaining independence amid 1991's Soviet collapse.
According to the Global Information Technology Report released last month by the World Economic Forum, which cited the need for a good Internet infrastructure as key to a country's competitiveness, Estonia ranked eighth of 82 countries in putting the Internet to practical use, the highest of any former communist country. Hinrikus said ministers formally approved the e-academy project Tuesday.
Officials from Ukraine and Georgia as well as countries like Uzbekistan and Mongolia are expected to attend one- and two-week courses at the school in the capital, Tallinn, said Linnar Viik, who helped put the project together.
Šaltinis:
hindustantimes.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
The only physician in her village of Tsoniarisi, Mzevinar Bolkvadze sees patients all day in a newly built and equipped ambulatory.
more »
As of 7 September 2009, 48 of the 53 Member States in the WHO European Region had reported over 49 000 laboratory-confirmed cases of pandemic (H1N1) 2009 virus infection.
more »
China's food and drug administration say clinical trials of a vaccine against the H1N1 flu strain have been successful.
more »
As of 31 August 2009, 48 of the 53 Member States in the WHO European Region had reported laboratory-confirmed cases of pandemic (H1N1) 2009 virus infection.
more »
The European Union Health Security Committee and the Early Warning and Response authorities adopted a policy statement proposed by the European Commission which outlines a shared European approach towards identifying target and priority groups for A H1N1 vaccination.
more »
As of 20 August 2009, 47 of the 53 Member States in the WHO European Region had reported over 42 000 laboratory-confirmed cases of pandemic (H1N1) 2009 virus infection.
more »
About 1000 participants, mostly from North America, debated solutions to the obesity epidemic in the United States (US) at the Weight of the Nation conference, organized in Washington, USA, by the US Centers for Disease Control.
more »
The European Union Health Security Committee and the Early Warning and Response authorities (HSC/EWRS) unanimously adopted for the first time two policy statements proposed by the European Commission on public health measures for pandemic influenza A (H1N1) 2009.
more »
As of 10 August 2009, 46 of the 53 countries in the WHO European Region had reported over 33 000 laboratory-confirmed cases of pandemic (H1N1) 2009 virus infection, including 55 fatalities in 7 countries.
more »
The U.S. company Moog Medical Devices which acquired the company the Lithuanian Viltechmeda at the beginning of the year 2009, intends to invest EUR 2M in Lithuania in the nearest future, to establish a modern services centre.
more »