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Despair
over new cellular foreign currency payment system
MISA-Zimbabwe
January 05, 2009
http://www.misazim.co.zw/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=410&Itemid=1
Several subscribers with
Econet Wireless were inconvenienced during the past few days and
continue to be frustrated as they fail to phone nor replenish their
accounts after the service provider switched its payment system
from Zimdollars to a new foreign currency payment system.
The new payment
system has seen cellular service providers that include NetOne and
Telecel charging in United States dollars after being granted foreign
currency licenses by the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe. It is feared
that the new system will adversely affect the communication needs
of the majority of Zimbabweans who are already struggling to make
ends meet in a hyperinflationary environment which has spawned untold
economic hardships on the populace.
Econet Wireless corporate
communications manager Rangarirai Mberi attributed the disruption
in services to major network upgrading which has disrupted the entire
network system. MISA Zimbabwe notes with great concern that this
latest development comes in the wake of the appalling state of fixed
and mobile telephone networks in Zimbabwe which has seen subscribers
failing to communicate as and when they desire despite the high
tariff charges.
MISA-Zimbabwe shares
the concerns of subscribers who say they will not be able to afford
the new payment mode as the little foreign currency they can lay
their hands on is reserved for basic commodities which are now being
sold in foreign currency by most retail outlets. While supermarkets
and other service providers are now charging in foreign currency,
the majority of workers are still being paid in the ever increasingly
valueless Zimbabwean dollar.
Equally worrying is that
this development comes on the backdrop of Econet's November
6, 2008 statement announcing the withdrawal of its contract line
services for clients under the Business Partna scheme as of 10 November
2008, a move which has left thousands of Zimbabweans deprived of
their right to communicate.
MISA Zimbabwe reiterates
its earlier concern that this state of affairs in the telecommunications
industry is a serious impediment on the right of the people of Zimbabwe
to communicate; as well as their right to freedom of expression
as guaranteed in Article 9 of the African Charter on Human and People's
Rights. This right includes the ability and access to usage of tools
of communication such as the internet, fixed telephones and mobile
telephone networks by ordinary people, as emphasized by the World
Summit on Information Societies (WSIS) held in Tunis, Tunisia 2005.
In light of these universally
accepted principles, MISA Zimbabwe urges the fixed and mobile telephone
service providers as well as the Postal and Telecommunications Regulatory
Authority of Zimbabwe (POTRAZ) to act with the full understanding
that communication is a human right and not a privilege and that
telecommunications remain key pillars of freedom of expression and
access to information.
We therefore appeal to
the service providers to seriously reconsider the impact of their
decisions in view of the fundamental right of citizens to exercise
their right to freedom of expression and access to information.
Visit
the MISA-Zimbabwe fact
sheet
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