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Mobile
phones play role in Zimbabwe
Ken
Banks, PC World
April 14, 2008
http://www.pcworld.com/businesscenter/article/144535/mobile_phones_play_role_in_zimbabwe.html
It's well-known
that mobile phones are revolutionizing communications across the
globe, particularly in developing countries where landline infrastructure
is lacking in many rural and urban areas. They are the only means
of communication for hundreds of millions of people, and have opened
up economic opportunities for their owners, who can use them to
find out about job openings, advertise services, or operate complementary
businesses such as charging phone batteries.
But mobile phones
aren't everyone's friend. To dictators and leaders of oppressive
regimes, mobiles are often seen as more of a nuisance, as disruptive
and something to be wary of, to fear and control. These ubiquitous
little devices have already been responsible for the downfall of
a number of leaders, most noticeably Philippine President Joseph
Estrada, who was forced from office in early 2001 following text-message-fueled
mass demonstrations in Manila.
Where democracy
is under pressure around the world, the mobile phone is increasingly
seen as a tool that may help stop the rot. My interest in the subject
centers on the use of a text-messaging hub I developed back in 2005,
which has since been used by a number of human rights organizations,
particularly Nigeria last year to monitor the presidential elections,
in Pakistan during the recent state of emergency and now in Zimbabwe
during the election crisis.
Media interest
in the subject is also on the rise, with a recent article in The
Economist examining the use of mobile technology in political activism.
Its description of the battle between activists and governments
as a game of "cat and mouse" could not be more accurate,
and continues to draw parallels today with events in Zimbabwe and
Tibet.
When oppressive
regimes put a stranglehold on the local media, and actively engage
in campaigns of misinformation, activists turn to whatever tools
they can to redress the balance. Increasingly, these tools are mobile
technologies: Camera phones that capture images of beatings and
civil-rights abuses, and text messages coordinating and informing
citizens, are just two examples of an increasing use of the technology
as activists try to keep up with, and stay one step ahead of, their
opponents.
Mobile technology
is today playing a growing role in Zimbabwe, a country with a largely
state-owned media and a president unwilling to relinquish power.
The future of the country continues to rest on a knife edge, as
it seems to have done for the past two weeks (or the past few years,
depending on your perspective). Like many people with an interest
in the country, and like many others with friends or relatives living
and working there, I've been closely following events on TV and
online. International news sites such as the BBC have been as good
as ever, but I've also been spending increasing amounts of time
on local sites, which, I feel, often give a 'truer', more personal
sense of what's going on. One of the best sites for this has been
Kubatana.net.
Back in the
summer of 2006 I was fortunate to spend three weeks in Zimbabwe
working with Kubatana.
A local NGO (nongovernmental organization) seeking to promote human
rights and good governance, it was the very first user of my FrontlineSMS
software when it launched back in 2005, starting a trend that has
seen the software used for similar activities in a number of other
countries around the world. Kubatana has said that FrontlineSMS
finally opened up the possibilities for text messaging in its workplace.
In addition
to an election line that gives the latest news to citizens via SMS
(short message service), Kubatana has been running a "What
would you like a free Zimbabwe to look like?" initiative. Zimbabweans
have been incredibly responsive, with many people saying that the
question gave them hope in uncertain times. According to Kubatana:
"It's also
been a real learning experience for us, reminding us that ordinary
Zimbabweans have a wealth of good ideas to contribute, and our political
and civic leadership must work on building a more participatory
environment."
A combination
of SMS and e-mail was used in the initiative, with text messages
such as "Kubatana! No senate results as at 5.20 pm. What changes
do YOU want in a free Zim? Lets inspire each other. Want to know
what others say? SMS us your email addr" sent out to mobile
subscriber lists. FrontlineSMS was used to blast the messages out,
and then used to collect responses that were then distributed via
an electronic newsletter and on the Kubatana Community Blog.
According to
Kubatana, "Without FrontlineSMS we would not have been able
to process the volume of responses we have received, and we would
not have been able to establish a two-way SMS communications service
in the way that we have."
In the event
of a presidential run-off, Kubatana plans to produce a broadsheet
with feedback received from Zimbabweans in order to remind them
what each other wanted, and to inspire them to go out and vote (again).
After the election, it hopes to produce a booklet with a page on
some of these ideas and include an editor's comment, a cartoon or
even a set of postcards carrying the most unique, original and practical
ideas.
Unlike the Nigerian
elections, where FrontlineSMS was used as a monitoring tool, in
Zimbabwe it has been effectively used to mobilize and inform civil
society during and after the election process. In both cases, the
real success story has been the NGOs themselves - NMEM in Nigeria
and Kubatana in Zimbabwe -- that have demonstrated the power of
mobile technology in civil society initiatives and what can be done
when the right tools make it into the hands that need them the most.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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