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Archive for July 25th, 2009

SOUTH AFRICA: Violent protests “worrying but not surprising”

Posted by African Press International on July 25, 2009



Photo: Tebogo Letsie/IRIN
Protesters demanding improved services turned their anger to foreigners in 2008

JOHANNESBURG, – Protesters have again brought violence to township streets throughout South Africa over state failure to deliver on longstanding promises of housing and social services for all, but the discontent and frustration run much deeper.

In the depths of an unusually cold winter, the poor, feeling increasingly marginalized economically, socially and politically, and the government seemingly unwilling to listen, let alone act, are seeing protest as the only viable alternative.

“It’s like violence is the only thing the government listens to,” Adele Kirsten, executive director of the Centre for the Study of Violence and Reconciliation (CSVR), told IRIN.

“This is worrying but not surprising,” Kirsten said. Service delivery backlogs and related protests had long been common in South Africa, but the sudden surge since the beginning of July and the high levels of violence had been exceptional.

By 23 July the media had reported widespread violent protests in the provinces of Mpumalanga, Gauteng, North West and Western Cape over poor access to housing, electricity, water and health care.

Although the country has made some progress in improving housing and access to utilities like clean water, hundreds of thousands of people still live in abject poverty in vast shantytowns, and many expressed their anger and disappointment in clashes with police, burning tyres and throwing stones at passing vehicles.

An inherited problem is still a problem

The election in April of President Jacob Zuma – hailed as ‘a man of the people’ – brought “high levels of expectation and excitement”, and the popular hope was that Zuma and the African National Congress (ANC), which has held power since 1994, would now “translate rhetoric into practice”, so the poor would find representation and sympathy for their plight, Kirsten said.

''It’s like violence is the only thing the government listens to''

But many voters, like Vusi Mthembe, who lives in Thokoza, a dusty township about 50km east of Johannesburg and the site of recent violent protests, have run out of patience. “We vote for this and then nothing no toilet, no running water. It seems as if they are cheating us,” he told IRIN.

Community-level government officials, often viewed as self-serving and inherently corrupt, have left much undone; people have felt excluded from political decision-making, their predicament unheard, their needs unmet.

“Before the election you see the councillors; after the election they just vanish. They promise us something and thereafter disappear; there is no one to talk to about what is going on here [where we live],” Mthembe said.

Loren Landau, Director of the Forced Migration Studies Programme at the University of the Witwatersrand, commented: “Where councillors are afraid to visit the communities they represent, and members of parliament (MPs) are chosen by the ANC’s executive committee with little popular consultation, it is little wonder that people resort to violence to draw attention to their concerns.”

A vicious circle

In Landau’s view, “What’s going on now reflects two governance challenges that have gone unaddressed for too long: the first is less about service delivery than about managing expectations, and encouraging people to express their grievances (legitimate or otherwise) peacefully through community or political institutions.”

The second concerned the treatment of non-nationals in contentious communities, and a growing fear that violent protesters would increasingly target foreigners, often blamed for “stealing” jobs, women and houses.

The xenophobic violence that swept through South Africa in 2008 – killing at least 62 people and displacing 100,000 others – would return if nothing was done to address its root causes.

“Many people will say we learned no lessons from last year’s violence. I would disagree. What we have learned is that you can assault, extort, rob, or murder non-nationals without facing any consequences,” Landau warned. Xenophobic incidents occurred during July 2009 in the town of Balfour, Mpumalanga Province.

Official reaction to the latest violence has been disappointing, raising fears that protesting South Africans would become further alienated from their government: “So far there has been no clear political response to this,” said CSVR’s Kirsten.

Instead of real engagement, police fired rubber bullets and teargas in a crackdown on protesters, while politicians expressed scant tolerance for their grievances, perceived by many as legitimate.

“We cannot allow anybody to use illegal means to achieve their objectives. Anything that is done must be done within the law and constitution,” the Minister of Co-operative Governance and Traditional Affairs, Sicelo Shiceka, said on Talk Radio 702, a local radio station.

This does not offer much hope to the cold and desperate people in Thokoza. Dudu Ntomo, who has spent most of her life in the shantytown, told IRIN: “It just goes round and round here, nothing changes – there’s no toilet, no tap, no houses this place is just not right.”

tdm/llg/he source.www.irinnews.org

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Superfast internet goes live in East Africa

Posted by African Press International on July 25, 2009

Stephen Tricarico (right) the technical engineer network testing services from TYCO Telecommunications, USA shows Seacom Fibre Optic technical staff engineer Ismail Abdulshakur where to click to officially commission the Seacom fibre optic under sea cable at the Swahili Cultural Centre where they have put up the landing station. Photo/GIDEON MAUNDU

Stephen Tricarico (right) the technical engineer network testing services from TYCO Telecommunications, USA shows Seacom Fibre Optic technical staff engineer Ismail Abdulshakur where to click to officially commission the Seacom fibre optic under sea cable at the Swahili Cultural Centre where they have put up the landing station. Photo/GIDEON MAUNDU

ByLEE MWITI

In Summary

  • Fibre optic operator Seacom goes live in Kenya, Tanzania, Mozambique, Uganda and South Africa.
  • Broadband internet arrives in the east coast of Africa.
Internet broadband has become a reality in Kenya, Tanzania, Mozambique and Uganda for the first time after one of the four awaited undersea cables was finally switched on today (Thursday).

The Seacom cable went live simultaneously in the four countries in addition to South Africa, and the Kenya portion of the cable was immediately connected to five internet service providers.

However, Seacom officials declined to name the ISPs because their customer contracts barred them from revealing such information.

Seacom, a privately-funded consortium, laid the cable at a cost of US$865m (Sh67 billion at current exchange rates). It is due to be connected to Rwanda in two weeks.

The commissioning was marked with a live telecast by Tanzania President Jakaya Kikwete in Dar es Salaam with the media in Kampala, Maputo, Johannesburg, London and Marseille.

New era

The arrival of this cable signals the beginning of a new era in the telecommunications sector, said Mr Kikwete.

History has been made.

Cisco Systems vice-president Le Roux, whose firm provided the technology for the cable, said: ” Today is the day technology has arrived in Africa.”

Seacom announced that it would offer wholesale prices in the range of $100 (Sh7,700 ) per megabyte, with even more subsidised costs of between $10-$25 (Sh770-Sh1,925) dollars to schools, and research and health institutions.

I can emphatically state that broadband will change the connectivity and economy of Africa, said Seacom president Brian Herlihy in a live feed from the Tanzanian capital.

Five yet-to-be-named internet players were the first to access the 6,500 kilometre-cable following the switch and will now connect their equipment to the marine cable as they prepare to link offices and homes.

But the private consortium warned that Kenyans would have to wait longer for the expected massive drop in prices as industry players sought to recoup their initial outlay.

What we are providing is a highway and it will be up to the telcos and internet service providers to decide the final cost, said Mr Haskell Ward, Seacoms senior vice-president in charge of government relations, at the launch at the Swahili Cultural Centre where the Mombasa landing station is based.

Bandwidth capacity

The benefits are expected to be immense with the sub-sea cable expected to provide super-fast internet connections and vastly expanded bandwidth capacity.

No project can compete with this for the importance it holds for Kenya and for Africa, said Mr Ward.

The forthcoming Africa Growth and Opportunity Act (Agoa) Forum to be led by United States Secretary of State is a prime example of what the cable can do.

The talks are set to be streamed live to the five countries and will also feature what has until now been the stuff of movies.

Talks are on with medical service provider AAR to have a clinic at the venue that would be virtually manned by staff located at a different venue; a variant of telemedicine.

E-commerce and e-learning will also be greatly enhanced and it is this in mind that Finance minister Uhuru Kenyatta allocated money to mobile ICT laboratories in all the constituencies.

Real time event streaming, high resolution and internet television and better voice, data and video services will also be among the more visible benefits.

Business Process Outsourcing firms are expected to be among the big winners as they would be able to compete on a more equal platform with their counterparts in Asian economies such as the Phillipines and India.

However analysts say it will be a challenge for the country to manage the huge broadband capacity given the dearth of skills and local content.

Seacoms entire system will be operated and controlled through Seacoms network operations centre based in Pune, India
source.nation.ke

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