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Zimbabwe
army says cellphones danger to security
Reuters
November 28, 2006
http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/articlenews.aspx?
HARARE (Reuters)
- Zimbabwe's military has said the country's mobile phone operators
are threatening national security by using independent connections
to the outside world, official media reported on Tuesday.
"The mobile service
providers have their own international gateway system, and from
a security point of view, this is dangerous to the state because
we need to monitor traffic coming in and outside, but at the moment
we can not," the Zimbabwe Defence Forces director for communications,
Colonel Livingstone Chineka, was quoted by the Herald newspaper
as saying.
Chineka said the
three mobile phone firms should route international calls through
the state-owned fixed line operator TelOne, and not use their own
gateways, in order to make it easier to monitor international traffic.
There was no immediate
comment from the three operators.
A Zimbabwe court
this month suspended a government statute forcing mobile operators
to route international calls through TelOne after a challenge by
the country's two private firms, Econet Wireless and Telecel Zimbabwe.
The two
companies had argued that re-routing calls through TelOne was meant
to subsidise the loss-making state company. Net*One, the third mobile
operator, is government-owned.
Zimbabwe early
this year unveiled a proposed law that would give it authority to
monitor phones and mail -- both conventional and Internet -- to
protect national security and fight crime.
Rights groups
say the "Interception
of Communication Bill" is part of a crackdown which has included
tough policing and political intimidation to stifle criticism of
an economic crisis many blame on President Robert Mugabe's policies.
Chineka, who was
giving evidence on the bill, said security forces would give their
input before the proposed law is passed by parliament, adding that
mobile operators should be given at least a month to be connected
to TelOne's gateway.
"We want to listen,
to make sure the nation is safe. If we liberalise the gateways then
it means there would be a group of people who would communicate
without our knowledge," Chineka was quoted as saying by the government-controlled
daily Mirror.
Econet has the
largest subscriber base in Zimbabwe and is in the process of adding
a further 300,000 customers before the end of the year to take its
client numbers to 800,000.
The company, listed
on the Zimbabwe stock exchange, has said that if incoming traffic
for customers on mobile networks is diverted to TelOne, private
mobile companies would be unable to raise foreign currency to settle
bills with operators overseas.
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