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Newsletter
# 55 - Stakeholder update
Pottar
Muzamba, Tonga.Online
July 10, 2007
Introduction
As the challenge to network
the Information Technology Centres (ITCs) and provide Internet services
in Binga district draws nearer, the month of April was packed with
series of meetings and workshops. The goal was to assess and review
the magnitude of the work delivered by the project and come up with
a tentative plan which will guide the future implementation of activities.
Contrary to April, the
month of May and June was dominated by the completion of the feasibility
study, i.e. the report writing. This report is very critical for
the achievement of the Tonga.Online objectives because it is suggesting
appropriate options and solutions how to approach further ICT infrastructure
(and relevant skills) development.
Tonga.Online
Advisory Board
The inaugurational meeting
for the projects Advisory Board was held on the 20th of April 2007
in Bulawayo. At that meeting, the Board elected its chairperson
and vice who happen to be Mrs LL Dhlamini, the Provincial Administrator
of Matabeleland North under the Ministry of Local Government, Public
Work and Urban Development, whilst the vice chairperson is Mr Adam
Dube of the Ministry of Education, Sports and Culture. (Find all
members and their pictures online). The constitution to govern operational
parameters for the Board was thoroughly discussed.
Feasibility
study for ICT infrastructure development
The feasibility
study report which was expected to be circulated in mid May was
eventually distributed end of June. Dr. S.B. Mangena from National
University for Science and Technology (NUST) has been the study
supervisor. A joint Advisory Board and RDDC Science & Technology
subcommittee meeting to discuss the report has been scheduled for
the 20th of July 2007 (but deferred to a date to be anounced soon
- due to collision with other commitments of Board members). After
the committees will have exhaustively deliberated, resolved on the
report and advised Tonga.Online on the way forward, further ICT
infrastructure development will commence thereafter.
Deployment
of IT trained teachers
The district
had hoped to get some IT trained teachers during the second school
term as promised by the Ministry of Education, Sports and Culture
(MOESC), however nothing materialised because the shortage of teachers
with ICT skills in schools is still manifest. With computer sciences
being an examinable subject and the roll-out of technology in more
schools, a shortage of people with adequate skills would grossly
retard progress in future.
Training
A two days workshop
on Free and Open Source Software FOSS and on web management and
editing was conducted by Stefan Kuthan from Austria Zimbabwe Friendship
Association (AZFA) on the 26th and 27th April respectively. The
purpose of the workshop was to impart relevant IT skills. A total
of 15 people (3 females and 12 males), mainly school teachers, the
Ministry of Education DEO officials and Tonga.Online staff were
exposed to these imperative and crucial skills in preparation for
the upcoming Internet access and web activities.
Routine trainings which
are conducted at different ITCs for the community and the school
pupils have been adjourned during the month of April due to the
holidays in all schools, save for Sianzyundu Secondary School which
had programmed for holiday lessons for form four pupils. The trainings
resumed in the month of May at all the centres. During the month
of May, only school pupils were trained in most ITCs simply because
community members can not afford to pay for the courses owing to
the economic hardship currently prevailing in the country. In this
regard the 'user pay concept' has to be properly managed if the
"access for all" objective has to be accomplished.
Upgrade
of Binga High ITC
Binga High School
ITC was upgraded with 14 state of art computers procured by AZFA
in Linz / Upper Austria. The computers were all networked and installed
with Edubuntu, a Free Open Source Software (FOSS) during the month
of April. The installation of new computers facilitated the resuscitation
of the Internet services. A total of 736 students (315 males and
321 females) from form 0ne (1) to form six (6) are undergoing training
at the centre. The students have adapted well to the FOSS software
which came along with the new computers. No courses were run for
the wider community in the month of April and May. In the month
of April training could not be conducted owing to upgrading of the
centre which was taking place. Whilst in the month of May training
could not be conducted because the trainers were still familiarising
with the new software.
Twiimbilane
Studio
Registration of musicians
and practice sessions for musicians are ongoing with two groups
and one individual currently recording their music. The studio is
also actively focusing on the recording of traditional music for
archiving in a bid to expose Tonga traditional music to tertiary
institutions that offer music.
The first public performance
of the newly completed Kankolimba instrument was held on the 22nd
of April 2007 on the occasion of the visit by partners AZFA, HORIZONT3000
and Kunzwana Trust for the Tonga.Online midterm project review workshop.
Kankolimba is a combination
of two instruments, a Kwanongoma-style marimba instrument and the
Kalimba-like Tonga Kankobela. Some networking plans with Mr. Edward
Mungombe, the Siachilaba based famous Kankobela player are under
way. The purpose of the networking is to facilitate the transfer
of Kankobela music onto Kankolimba. The transfer process will be
done through a combined playing of Kankobela by Edward and the Kankolimba
by the youth group.
Monitoring
and support visits
A joint monitoring
visit was conducted by AZFA, HORIZONT3000, Kunzwana Trust and Tonga.Online
on the 23rd of April to Manjolo Secondary, Siachilaba Primary and
Sianzyundu Secondary Schools. The people who formed the monitoring
team were Stefan and Peter Kuthan (AZFA), Johannes Atzinger and
Hubertus Lindeiner (HORIZONT3000), Keith Goddard and Ignatius Mhambi
(Kunzwana Trust), Pottar Muzamba, Richard Simango and Theo Sianyuka
(Tonga.Online). The purpose of the visit was to establish how the
centres were operating and what challenges they experienced. One
major challenge which was highlighted by most of the centres was
how to sustain the operations of the ITCs amid the limited revenue
sources in the ITCs.
A one day Project Midterm
Review Workshop was held on the 24th of April 2007, facilitated
by Peter Kuthan / AZFA. The workshop participants were teachers,
the District Education officials, Kunzwana Trust, HORIZONT3000,
AZFA and Tonga.Online staff. The main thrust of the workshop was:
to review the level of implementation of the project and assess
reports from ITC's stakeholders and partners; to identify key issues
and lessons learned; to chart the way forward for 2007 / 2008 and
to clarify what to expect from whom. Quite a number of issues emerged
during the workshop and these issues require a proper strategy to
address them.
Arts
and culture
One of Tonga.Online
projects prime objectives is to promote and preserve the cultural
heritage of the Tonga people. It is particularily for this goal
that Tonga.Online was founded. On the 23rd of April 2007, the Tonga.Online
team, Austria Zimbabwe Friendship Association (AZFA), Kunzwana and
HORIZONT3000 visited the traditional Ngoma Buntibe dancing group
Simonga in Siachilaba ward and had a chance to interact and listen
to this unique music. It was quite pleasing to learn that the group
is growing from strength to strength.
Preparations for the
commemoration of Lwiindi festival on the 28th of July 2007 in Sinazongwe
district in Zambia are at an advanced stage. The Lwiindi festival
is a function where the Tonga people of the "Great River"
appease their ancestors for what they have done for them in a particular
given season. Currently, Tonga.Online is busy mobilising the Simonga
Ngoma Buntibe group and a few members from other groups to go across
and join their Zambian tribes' men in the celebration of such
an important function. This function will be also a learning process
for the BaTonga from the Zimbabwean side on how to preserve culture
which faces the risk of extinction. From the lessons learnt, it
is envisaged that the Zimbabwean counterparts will also mobilise
better to preserve and revitalize their culture.
Latest
news from LINZ: Tonga.Onair soon broadcasting in Zambia
A team from
Radio FRO in Linz / Austria - with Marcus Diess, Sandra Hochholzer,
Hannelore and Ingo Leindecker - is on their way to Sinazongwe
on the Zambian side of the Great River to establish a small community
based radio station at Sinazongwe Basic School.
This off-spring
of Tonga.Online will expand the outreach of the existing Information
Technology Centre ITC at the school and promote the creation of
relevant local content.
The team will therefore hold a workshop for local participants how
to run such a station: studio- and transmitting-techniques, analogue
audio-cut, microphone-techniques and the common work-out of the
first editorial and technical radio-transmissions.
The conclusion
of the three-weeks-stay will be the ceremonious opening and handover
of the broadcasting station to the Sinazongwe community prior to
the traditional Lwiindi ceremonies on 28th July. This thanksgiving
feast after harvest time will already be accompanied by the local
broadcast-activists on air.
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