|
Back to Index
Cellphone
boom eludes Zimbabwe
MISA-Zimbabwe
July 07, 2006
Zimbabwe's economic
meltdown, in the last seven years, has seen the country losing out
on the cellphone boom currently experienced by the rest of the African
continent. The situation is worsened the scarcity of foreign currency
and lack of investment in Information and Communication Technologies
(ICTs).
Mobile penetration
in Zimbabwe is pegged at 5%, in sharp contrast to the rest of Africa
where mobile phone use is spreading rapidly as an alternative to
fixed lines. South Africa's mobile phone sector covers more than
70% of the population while Namibia is on 40%.
World Summit on
Information Society's (WSIS) Plan of Action outlines the importance
of access to information and connectivity in line with the Millennium
Development Goals (MGDs). However, Zimbabwe is far from achieving
the goals set out in the WSIS Plan of Action and there is little
time left until the set target of 2015 for the achievement of the
MDGs comes to pass.
The country boasts
of only three mobile operators, Econet Wireless, state owned Net*One
and Telecel Zimbabwe.
Foreign currency
shortages have cramped network expansion in Zimbabwe's mobile phone
sector. Dakarayi Matanga, spokesperson for Econet Wireless, Zimbabwe's
biggest cellphone operator attributed 95% of the company's key components
were sourced abroad.
"Therefore, any
significant network expansion can only take place if and when the
company can access enough hard currency to import network equipment,"
said Matanga.
The use and availability
of lines is being couched within the framework of the pursuit of
profit. Speculators buy mobile sim cards for ZW$ 3 000 000 (Aprox
US30). They resell them on the black market at anything between
Z$15 000 000 million to ZW$20 000 000 (aprox US$ 150-200) as there
is no restriction on the price mark-up and the ever rising demand
for mobile lines pushes prices up.
State owned Net*One
mobile phone company, CEO Reward Kangai said recently his company
was planning to expand the network and hoped new lines would be
available soon but analysts doubt it will be able to meet the huge
pent-up demand from Zimbabweans. There is speculation that South
Africa's and Africa's largest mobile phone company MTN might buy
shares in state owned NetOne.
Privately owned,
Econet has the most subscribers slightly above 400 000, Net*One
has about 250 000 and Telecel has 140 000 subscribers. While Zimbabwe
postal regulator the Post and Telecommunications Regulatory Authority
of Zimbabwe (POTRAZ) had licensed a second fixed telephony company,
TeleAccess the company has failed to roll out services for past
five years.
Visit
the MISA-Zimbabwe fact
sheet
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.
TOP
|