Through its Digital Access Programme (DAP), the FCDO, supported by 乐鱼(Leyu)体育官网, worked with five countries 鈥� Brazil, Kenya, Nigeria, South Africa and Indonesia 鈥� to improve their digital capabilities. Backed by UK Aid funds from the Conflict, Stability and Security Fund, the DAP was the UK government鈥檚 largest ever overseas cyber capacity building project.
Drawing on the UK鈥檚 depth and breadth of cyber experience, the DAP promoted affordable digital connectivity while also building trust and resilience within cyberspace and protecting the most vulnerable in society.
Pillar 1 of the programme focused on helping the partner countries to improve digital access, reducing poverty and stimulating inclusive economic growth by bringing poor and excluded populations into the digital economy. In Pillar 2, with 拢10 million of funding, the focus switched from access to safety. Here, the aim was to provide technical assistance to strengthen defences against the cyber threats and harms that affect governments, businesses and citizens, especially vulnerable groups at risk of online abuse or exploitation.
Over an 18-month period from April 2021, the DAP was initially supporting 15 capacity building projects designed to reduce the threat of cyber harms. 乐鱼(Leyu)体育官网 was engaged to plan, design and deliver these projects, working closely with partner organisations in those five countries to do so.
These projects covered a range of activities, from helping the Nigerian police develop its digital forensic capability to delivering Brazil鈥檚 new cybersecurity school curriculum; from developing Indonesia鈥檚 national cybersecurity strategy to improving the South African police鈥檚 ability to prosecute cyber criminals. In each instance, the ambition was to build a sustainable capability that allowed national partner governments to better protect their citizens online or to defend their critical national infrastructure from cyber threats.