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The State Information Technology Agency (SITA) today announced
that together with its partners, Neotel and Business Connexion,
it has successfully deployed a Next Generation Network (NGN)
for the South African government. The NGN, a state-of-the-art
network, replaces the Government Common Core Network (GCCN),
which was first deployed in 2003.
SITA previously announced that since the GCCN's implementation,
capacity requirements on the network had grown by 150 per
cent year-on-year, but there had been no major bandwidth upgrades
to support the increase. The NGN project was undertaken to
address this constraint and with its deployment, SITA can
now utilise the network's additional capacity to create more
virtual private networks, cater for additional ports to connect
clients and provide broadband solutions.
The NGN project, which commenced in May 2007, was implemented
by October last year, as per the project timelines. The migration
of government departments was concluded during January 2008.
In addition, the migration was virtually seamless, which ensured
that government departments continued to function without
disruption or loss of services during the transition.
Minister for Public Service and Administration, Geraldine
Fraser-Moleketi, has praised the parties for delivering the
new network within very short timeframes and within budget.
"Successes, such as the NGN project, demonstrate the
importance of forging the right partnerships between the public
and private sector, which are important to ensure all parties
play a role in the transformation of government service delivery,"
says Fraser-Moleketi.
The NGN project's total investment is worth R454 million
over a five year period and it represents the largest deployment
of NGN services in sub-Saharan Africa in the public sector.
Neotel, South Africa's first converged communications network
operator was awarded a five year contract to provide national
backbone transmission services to support the new NGN. Neotel's
high capacity links connect SITA's key sites in major cities
and towns across South Africa with nearly 700 megabit per
second of transmission bandwidth. This is nearly twice the
bandwidth SITA has procured in the past.
The investment also entailed an upgrade of the GCCN backbone
from Nortel to Cisco technology. Business Connexion supplied,
installed and will support the network equipment on the NGN
for three years. The upgrade is worth in excess of R76 million,
excluding maintenance.
SITA's CEO, Llewellyn Jones, says the organisation has been
actively pursuing a strategy to provide NGN services to render
more cost-effective and improved offerings to government departments.
"With the NGN in place we can now provide government
departments with better response times and a higher quality
network that has the ability to run voice, video and data
services. Furthermore, the NGN enables SITA to deliver customer
services quicker and the ability to plan capacity and profile
traffic which allows us to allocate bandwidth more efficiently.
The structure of the NGN also translates into lower operational
and equipment costs," says Jones.
Jones adds that the new network will allow SITA to expand
its client base by providing communications services to municipalities.
"SITA can now also provide additional, as well as customised
services to its clients, for example, voice, thereby reducing
voice costs. Furthermore, based on the unique requirements
of government departments, tailored solutions will be developed,
which could include video and multimedia."
Neotel implemented a full Internet Protocol (IP) backbone
to all SITA's switching centres within seven months. The company
also provided a full alternative transmission routing solution
and installed a proactive monitoring system for SITA.
Neotel's MD, Ajay Pandey, says that all of the company's
efforts are directed towards fulfilling their promise to South
Africans, which is to reduce the cost of doing business and
to bridge the digital divide.
"It took Neotel seven months to successfully deploy
the state-of-the-art network, tailored for the specific needs
of government. We are particularly pleased that, through our
partnership with SITA, we have made it possible for government
to improve its service to the citizens," says Pandey.
Subsequent phases of the NGN will entail the installation
of dual routers into 10 of SITA's switching centres, which
will commence in May 2008. Intrusion Prevention Devices will
also be installed at customer sites, which is expected to
commence around July 2008.
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