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Tigo announced today that its General Manager, Diego Gutierrez, will be leaving the company

Tigo announced today that its General Manager, Diego Gutierrez, will be leaving the company on 1st April to take on a new role in the group.  He will be replaced on an interim basis by Cecile Tiano who begins work in Tanzania this week.
Mr Gutierrez has enjoyed considerable success with Tigo in Tanzania. Having joined from Tigo Ghana in 2009, initially as Deputy General Manager, and then as General Manager from 2012, he has been instrumental in driving Tigo’s progress. In his time, it grew by 100% to over eight million customers, successfully rolled out 3G and MFS, and became a powerhouse of innovation with developments such as free Facebook, Tigo Pesa returning cash to users, interoperability and cross-border-payments with currency conversion.
With such expertise in mobile money, Diego is to become Millicom’s Head of Mobile Financial Services for Latin America.       
Cecile Tiano joins the team having most recently been Tigo’s interim General Manager in DR Congo.  Prior to that she was a consultant to both Tigo Ghana and Tigo Tanzania having previously worked in senior roles in telecoms, media and internet.  
Commenting on the changes, Arthur Bastings, Executive Vice-President for Africa of Millicom, said “Diego has done a fantastic job at Tigo – providing real innovation in the market with a number of world firsts.  Partly as a result of his contributions, Tanzania has become a world leader in the Mobile Financial Services space and the internet has become an affordable reality for broad parts of the population.  We wish him well in his new role as we welcome Cecile to Tanzania. She is a very accomplished business executive and I know she will continue to provide strong leadership to the team.”
source: Tigo Tanzania

Kenyan startup Echo Mobile partners IBM, Airtel to fight Ebola outbreak

IBM Research Africa, Airtel and Kenya’s Echo Mobile have launched a citizen engagement and analytics system in Sierra Leone that enables communities affected by Ebola to communicate their issues and concerns directly to the government; a donation of IBM Connections technology in Nigeria to strengthen the Lagos State government’s preparedness for future disease outbreaks; and a global platform for sharing Ebola-related open data.

The efforts combine expertise from IBM’s global network of research labs with the company’s years of experience in humanitarian disaster response by applying mobile technology, data analytics and cloud computing to help governments and relief agencies as they seek to contain the deadly disease.
The work benefits from contributions from a number of partners including Sierra Leone’s Open Government Initiative, Cambridge University’s Africa’s Voices project, Airtel and Kenya’s Echo Mobile.
Additionally, IBM’s new Africa research lab, in collaboration with Sierra Leone’s Open Government Initiative, has developed a system that enables citizens to report Ebola-related issues and concerns via SMS or voice calls. It provides actionable insight to the government about the day-to-day experiences of communities directly affected by Ebola to help improve its strategy for containing the disease.
“For us to tackle Ebola, it is crucial to maintain an open dialogue between the government and the people of Sierra Leone,” said Khadija Sesay Director of Sierra Leone’s Open Government Initiative. “IBM has enhanced our work on citizen engagement through the use of innovative technology and opened up an effective communication channel with the general public so that we can learn from their input and create actionable policies in the fight against Ebola.”
Tapping supercomputing power and analytics capabilities via the cloud, the system is able to rapidly identify correlations and highlight emerging issues across the entire data set of messages. As the SMS and voice data are location specific, IBM is able to create opinion-based heat-maps which correlate public sentiment to location information.
For example, it has already brought to light specific regions with growing numbers of suspected Ebola cases which require urgent supplies like soap and electricity, as well as faster response times for body collection and burials. The system has also highlighted issues with the diagnosis of Ebola empowering the government to approach the international community to request more testing facilities and equipment.
“As Africa’s first technology research lab, we are uniquely positioned to use innovation to help tackle some of the continent’s biggest challenges,” said Dr. Uyi Stewart, Chief Scientist, IBM Research – Africa. “We saw the need to quickly develop a system to enable communities directly affected by Ebola to provide valuable insight about how to fight it. Using mobile technology, we have given them a voice and a channel to communicate their experiences directly to the government.”
The system uses radio broadcasts to encourage people to get in touch and express their opinions. Cambridge University’s Africa’s Voices project has helped to develop a radio engagement model, incorporating questions into public service announcements to elicit feedback from citizens in both English and Krio – one of Sierra Leone’s most widely spoken languages.
“Radio is a powerful medium in Africa but its potential to gather and analyse audience feedback has not been fully seized,” said Dr. Sharath Srinivasan, Director of Cambridge University’s Centre of Governance and Human Rights. “We are working with IBM to offer people across Sierra Leone a channel to voice their opinions and, crucially, to ensure that the data is rapidly analyzed and turned into valuable insight about the effectiveness of public service announcements and possible public misconceptions about Ebola.”
Telco operator Airtel has set up the toll-free number via which citizens are able to send SMS messages.
“Mobile technology is Africa’s most powerful communications platform providing an important channel for reaching large numbers of the population,” said Sudipto Chowdhury, Managing Director, Airtel, Sierra Leone. “As one of Africa’s leading mobile operators, we will do everything we can to ensure that mobile technology contributes to tackling the spread of Ebola and we are partnering with IBM to ensure the effective flow of information between the government and the citizens of Sierra Leone.”
The SMS data is anonymized by Kenyan start-up Echo mobile which specialises in leveraging basic mobile phones to give voice to underserved communities.
“We’re working to make sure that the stream of messages from patients, health workers and the general public can be used to augment the response effort and provide a direct and near real-time view of the situation on the ground,” said Jeremy Gordon, Product Director, Echo Mobile.
IBM is currently looking to extend the work to analyze mobile phone signal data in order to monitor and track population movement enabling scientists to map and predict the spread of disease.

BBC launches Ebola information service on WhatsApp

The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) has launched an Ebola information service on the popular multimedia instant communication platform WhatsApp.

The corporation said the service is in English and French languages. It will provide public health information on Ebola from the BBC, using audio, text message posts and images. Furthermore, the service would deliver Ebola-related breaking news alerts to subscribers.
Other features of the service include News About Ebola, a news and information programme broadcast twice every weekday, the focus of the programme is on the affected region of West Africa. It would also feature Ebola Infos, a twice-daily Ebola bulletin in French on BBC Afrique, and increased partnerships with other broadcasters.
Director of the World Service Group Peter Horrocks said: “This outbreak of Ebola shows no signs of abating. Myths and misinformation about Ebola are still widespread – and life-threatening. The BBC is trusted by millions of people in the affected countries, so we are stepping up our efforts to reach people with timely information, whether they’re listening to the radio, watching TV or using chat apps. We’re committed to playing our part and will continue looking at new ways to reach audiences, for example by developing programmes in local vernacular languages.”
source: Humanipo

Phone companies partner on e-money transactions

Tigo, Airtel and Zantel on Wednesday signed an agreement allowing its customers in Tanzania send money to each other on their mobile handsets.
"The service will start by end of this month. This is the first agreement in Africa to adopt such 'interoperability' whereby Mobile network operators allows their customer to send and receive money across the network and the e-money goes direct to the respective customer e-wallet account, " it was announced on Wednesday.

CHIEF Executive Officers of three mobile phone companies (from left to right), Zantel’s, Prapat Ghose, Tigo’s, Diego Gutierrez and Airtel Managing Director, Sunil Colaso join hands together to mark the launch of a new Mobile Financial System (MFS) Interoperability Partnership at a short ceremony held in Dar es Salaam on Wednesday.

The joint press statement also listed other benefits customers of the three companies would enjoy as the ability to send money at more affordable rates and in a simplified way which does not require use of PIN codes when making withdrawals as had been the practice before signing of the agreement.

Tigo's General Manager for Tanzania, Mr Diego Gutierrez, commented, "We are delighted to work with Airtel and Zantel to extend the mobile money universe in Tanzania.

"With even more transactions possible, our customers' money is made even more safe and secure with this technology. Just as we co-operate with our competitors on voice calls and text to help our customers, so we hope to be able to do the same with mobile money and help make Tanzania a global pioneer in digital financial inclusion."

On his part Airtel Managing Director Sunil Colaso said: "Airtel is committed to introduce to our customers new innovative services that look beyond competition, a tremendous evolution to ensure mobile inclusion that is sought by many Tanzanians taking into account our reach across the country."

"Today's partnership will bring our customers closer to mobile service and ease their use of mobile money services," added Mr Colaso.

Zantel's Managing Director Pratap Ghose, said "Zantel has a strong commitment to excellence and innovation, and thus is happy about this partnership which will enable all our customers to conduct their businesses efficiently and with ease across Tanzania.

"Zantel is proud to have been the pioneer in launching Mobile payments in 2008; and hence will work with the industry and the regulatory bodies to ensure that we offer 'best in class' service to our customers", added Mr Ghose.
Source:Dailynews

All You Need to Know About M-Pawa

Commercial Bank of Africa (CBA) has partnered with Vodacom to launch M-Pawa, a revolutionary mobile banking service that makes it possible for millions of Tanzanians to save, earn interest and borrow money using their mobile phones.The launch of this service has made big news all over social, and traditional media. But is this service worth all the hype? Let’s see.


We can all agree that opening an M-Pawa account is easy, convenient and fast. Better still, you get to open your account from the comfort of your mobile phone wherever whenever. All you need to be is a registered Vodacom subscriber, registered M-Pesa user and have an active Vodacom M-Pesa account/line/. As it is the norm, you should be of legal with identification documentation.
If you meet the above qualifications,the process is simple.
What functions are available on the M-Pawa Menu?
The following options are available on M-Pawa menu;
  • Send money
  • Withdraw money
  • Loan
  • Balance
  • Mini-statement
  • Terms and conditions
Is there a need for different PINs for M-Pesa and M-Pawa accounts?
No. M-Pesa and M-Pawa accounts use the same PIN.
How do I activate M-Pawa?
  • Go to M-Pesa menu (*150*00#)
  • Select “M-Pawa”
  • Go to “Activate account”. The 2nd option is Terms & Conditions
  • Enter M-Pesa PIN
  • A message will appear requesting whether you have read and accept the Terms & Conditions. After accepting; an SMS will be sent informing you that your M-Pawa request has been received and will be processed shortly.
  • A notification to confirm that your account has been successfully created will follow.
How can you deposit money to your savings account?
You can deposit money into your savings account with the following steps:
  • Go to ‘M-Pesa’ menu
  • Select “M-Pawa”
  • Select ‘Send to M-Pawa’
  • Enter the amount to be sent
  • Enter M-Pesa PIN
  • Confirm the message displayed by pressing 1 to confirm or 2 to cancel
  • Wait for deposit confirmation message.
How can you withdraw money from your savings account?
  • Go to M-Pesa menu
  • Select “M-Pawa”
  • Select ‘Withdraw from M-Pawa’.
  • Enter Amount
  • Enter M-Pesa PIN
  • Confirm the details then press 1 to confirm
  • Wait for a confirmation SMS message.
Loans
For the first loan you will be eligible to take, you should have deposited money into your account. the amount you can borrow will be based on your usage of Vodacom Voice and DATE as well as M-Pesa usage.
Early loan repayments will increase your future loan qualification. Remember, your loan limit is dependent on your previous loan repayment behavior and usage of other Vodacom services.
You will be able withdraw cash from your nearest M-Pesa agent and you can access a mini statement of you M-Pawa transactions conveniently via SMS.
Next Big Thing?

M-Pawa is probably the next big thing. Convenience of paperless, safe and fast service can’t go unnoticed. The service will help nature a saving culture given the competitive interest calculated daily and paid out at the end of each calendar quarter. Lack of ledger fees, withdrawal and deposit charges makes the service affordable.
source:theceo

Tigo launches first Mobile Financial Services Smartphone App in East Africa

Tigo Tanzania has unveiled the first mobile financial services application in East Africa that enables Android and iOS users in the country to access their Tigo Pesa wallet much more conveniently and in a much simpler way than ever before.  

Addressing the press at the company head office in Dar es Salaam, Tigo’s Head of Financial Services Andrew Hodgson, said “From now on smartphone users in the country, can do all Tigo Pesa transactions including making payments, bank transfers, sending money and recharging, much faster and easier with the Tigo Pesa app.”
Hodgson added “You can now view all your contacts stored on your phone when choosing to send money via the Tigo Pesa application and you can also save your regular payments and bank transfer for quick access in future.”
He said with this application – known as Tigo Pesa Application - a customer will not be charged for data when accessing the application on the Tigo network, customers will also be able to access their  Tigo Pesa wallet from anywhere in the world through Wi-Fi or any mobile data connection available as long as they have a registered Tigo Pesa account.
“Another benefit that this application brings to mobile financial account holders in the country is giving them the ability to easily access and conveniently manage a single wallet from multiple devices,” the head of mobile financial services said.
This application comes barely two weeks after Tigo announced a move to provide free access to Facebook services to its customers, a development Hodgson says, “is in line with the company’s continued commitment to innovation and providing user friendly experiences to its customers.”
Describing the Tigo Pesa Application as an innovation that makes life easier, Hodgson said to download it, all a person needs to have is a Tigo registered simcard/number and a smart phone that uses the iOS or android operating systems.

Cross-border M-Pesa transfer likely in 2015

Next year, it may be possible for M-Pesa users in Kenya to send money to other network mobile subscribers outside the country.

British firm Vodafone, which owns the intellectual property rights to M-Pesa, last week said it was seeking regulatory approval to launch cross-border money transfers in 2015.
Partnerships with money transfer firm Western Union have made it possible for M-Pesa users in Kenya to receive remittances from abroad on their mobile wallets.
Following a separate deal, M-Pesa users in Kenya will also be able to receive remittances sent via MoneyGram on their phones beginning August.
However, sending money abroad using M-Pesa is currently not possible, and neither are international M-Pesa-to-M-Pesa transactions.
Under the proposal, payments will be routed through a single international hub, where issues such as currency conversions will be dealt with before the monies are delivered.
It will also incorporate other remittance transfer services and could potentially make it possible for M-Pesa users to send money to people using mobile money platforms outside the Vodafone network.
REGULATORY APPROVAL
“We are pursuing regulatory approval, the technology exists… we need to make sure that the protocols work properly and I would say that in 2015, you will start to see more M-Pesa-to-M-Pesa international transfers,” said Vodafone's director of Mobile Money, Michael Joseph.
M-Pesa was first launched in Kenya in 2007 by Safaricom, a company in which Vodafone has a 40 per cent stake. With its success in Kenya, Vodafone has since expanded the mobile money platform to other countries.
Currently, M-Pesa is used in at least nine countries other than Kenya, including Tanzania, South Africa, India, Lesotho and the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Early this year, Vodafone forayed into Europe by launching M-Pesa services in Romania.
Research carried out by the GSM Association last year found that a growing number of operators running mobile money platforms were eager to tap into the international remittance business.
“It is a business opportunity that many network operators are keen to explore, especially those with a live domestic mobile money service,” read the report.
COMPETITION
In East Africa, Tigo, a unit of Millicom Cellular, has launched cross-border mobile money transfer.
In February, the company brought to market a service that made it possible for Tanzanians and Rwandese to send money to each other, automatically converting currencies in the process.
The competitiveness of these cross-border mobile money services will depend on their ability to beat the prices offered by traditional money transfer firms.
According to the World Bank, African migrants sent about $60 billion (Sh5.16 trillion) back home in 2012. Globally, the remittance market is expected to hit the Sh50 trillion mark this year.
However, transfer costs are proving to be a major hindrance. The World Bank says that Africa is the most expensive market to send remittances to, with average costs of 12.4 per cent the value of a transaction.
“We need to make sure customers pay the lowest possible price,” said Mr Joseph.
Currently, Vodafone has concentrated on rolling out its mobile money platform in markets that are heavy cash users, many of them in the developing world. 
On the other hand, remittance traffic to Africa is mostly from Western Europe and North America, relatively cash-lite economies that do not necessarily need M-Pesa services.
MIGRANT COMMUNITIES
However, Mr Joseph argues that there may be a need for an M-Pesa type product targeted at migrant communities.
In Kenya, M-Pesa is facing a rapidly changing market and regulatory framework that may affect its competitiveness in the future, with the government calling for sharing of mobile money agent networks among operators in the country.
Safaricom accounts for about 81,025 agents. Communications Commission of Kenya (CCK) statistics indicate that as of December 2013, there were 93,689 mobile money agents in Kenya.
Equity Bank, East Africa’s largest financial institution by customer base, is also set to make its debut in the telecommunication market.
Mr Joseph acknowledges that Equity Bank has the potential to pose a challenge to M-Pesa since it “understands the bottom of the pyramid,” but he argues that “there is room for more players” in the business.
In early 2015, the relationship between Safaricom and Vodafone regarding M-Pesa is set to shift. A new M-Pesa platform, hosted in Kenya, is expected to go live.
Currently, the M-Pesa platform is hosted in Germany and Safaricom pays Vodafone to manage it.
Once the new platform goes live, Safaricom will only pay Vodafone license fees for the intellectual property rights to M-Pesa.
source:Dailynation

Samsung Galaxy S5 launched in South Africa

The S5 is Samsung’s next big push in thesmartphone market, and is the predecessor of the hugely-popular Galaxy S4, which was released little over a year ago.


“The Galaxy S5 exemplifies Samsung’s commitment to “people-inspired innovation. The Galaxy S5 represents an iconic design with essential and useful features, offeringconsumers mobile tools that enable them to effortlessly take control of their lives,” said Craige Fleischer, Director of Mobile Communications at Samsung Electronics South Africa.
Aside from a small form-factor change, Fleischer explained that many Galaxy users said that the camera was a major function of the device, so the company took it to heart and redesigned the technology behind the image capture functionality.
“The Galaxy S5 delivers the world’s fastest autofocus speed up to 0.3 seconds and the real time High Dynamic Range (HDR), reproducing natural light and colour with striking intensity at any circumstances. The new Selective Focus feature allows users to focus on a specific area of an object while simultaneously blurring out the background,” the company explained.
As with most smartphones released recently, the S5 also has an IP67 rating, meaning that it is dust and water proof for a specified time.
Additional features include a finger print scanner, and a new Ultra Power Saving Mode, which allows the device to operate for at least another 24-hours with only 10% battery remaining.
It also offers a Finger Scanner, providing a secure, biometric screen locking feature and replacing traditional passwords and offers access to Private Mode. The Ultra Power Saving Mode turns the display to black and white, and shuts down all unnecessary features to minimise battery consumption,” Samsung explained.
Power downloaders will be happy to know that the S5 makes use of the fifth generation Wi-Fi 802.11ac, 2X2 MIMO and the large number of LTE frequencies, with LTE Category 4 as standard. “For consumers seeking an even faster connection, the GALAXY S5 now features Download Booster, an innovative Wi-Fi technology for enhancing data speed by bonding Wi-Fi and LTE simultaneously,” Fleischer said.
The device is available in South Africa for the suggested retail price of R10 299.
source:ITnews

Mobile money tranfers gaining popularity in Tanzania

FINANCIAL transactions have always been a challenge for rural, poor people in Tanzania. M-Pesa, an immensely popular system of money transfer via mobile phone, has made life much easier.

Thomas Masagati had his doubts. The businessman wanted to send money for Christmas to his mother in Musoma, Mara Region but he was skeptical about using M-Pesa services for the first time. This was in November 2008, just a few months after Vodacom Tanzania introduced mobile money transfer services in the country. M-Pesa was not as widespread as today.


Mr Masagati faced another challenge: his mother did not own a mobile phone; she was using a neighbour’s handset to communicate with her son. “I always had to send money to my mother in Musoma, but since she has no bank account, it meant a great deal of difficulty and risk”, he remembers. Things are a now easier now thanks to M-Pesa and his mother’s own mobile phone.

The service is now widely used all over East Africa. It is set to become even more popular as more people learn about it, according to a report by Groupe Spéciale Mobile Association (GSMA), an association of mobile operators. The word ‘M-Pesa’ derives from ‘mobile’ and ‘pesa’, the Swahili word for cash. The system was first introduced in Kenya.

According to the World Bank, it has given the unbanked poor access to financial services: “M-Pesa is a small-value electronic payment and store of value system accessible from ordinary mobile phones. The affordability of the service has been key in opening the door to formal financial services for Kenya’s poor.”

The service enables its users to, among other things, deposit and withdraw money, transfer money to other users and non-users, pay bills, purchase airtime and transfer money between the service and a bank account. The popularity of M-Pesa in Eastern Africa has many reasons. Working individuals in Kenya, Uganda or Tanzania tend to have many dependents who often live far from their providers.

Remittances to a family in rural parts of the country are commonplace. This used to be difficult due to poor banking infrastructure. According to GSMA, as of 2006, only eight per cent of people in Tanzania had a bank account. The popular methods of sending money then were crude and unsafe, like asking a friend to deliver the money, to send envelopes via buses, to remit in kind or to transfer through the postal service.

In 2002, the UK Department for International Development (DFID) funded a research at Gamos (a company specialising in the social dimensions of technology use) and the Commonwealth Telecommunications Commission. The result was that people in Uganda, Botswana and Ghana were using mobile-phone airtime as a proxy for money transfer.

They transferred airtime to relatives or friends who then used or resold it. Gamos researchers approached MCel, a telecoms company in Mozambique and in 2004 MCel introduced the first authorised airtime credit swapping service, a precursor step towards M-Pesa. DfID then connected the researchers with Vodafone, with the aim to develop a system of mobile money transfer.

In April 2007, using a Kenyan student software development project, the Kenyan telecoms company Safaricom launched M-Pesa. In April 2008, Vodacom introduced M-Pesa in Tanzania. Fourteen months later, Vodacom announced that registrations had reached 280,000 users who were transferring the equivalent of 5.5 million US dollars per month.

In May 2013, the company claimed to have over 5 million M-Pesa subscribers in Tanzania and the monthly transactions were said to be worth more than $ 820 million. Vodacom uses a trust structure to protect deposits in the service.
A holding company has been registered in Tanzania, with independent directors, to act as a trustees for all funds from the M-Pesa business. When M-Pesa was first introduced, the service caught many banks off-guard. They pointed out that there was no proper law to guide and regulate mobile banking, prompting the government to introduce regulations to monitor and supervise transactions by mobile phones.

(No, in fact many banks have embraced the service) The Tanzania Communications Regulatory Authority (TCRA) reports that a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with the Bank of Tanzania (BoT) to regulate mobile money transfers was signed in 2011.
The MoU is designed to provide a mechanism for regulatory and supervisory coordination between the two bodies. While the central bank will regulate financial transactions, the Tanzania Communications Regulatory Authority will focus on communications infrastructure.

The MoU is meant to pave way for the new law. Prof John Nkoma, Director General of the TCRA is in favour of M-Pesa: “This system war born out of necessity. In Europe, the use of credit cards is widespread. But in this part of the world, credit cards are not common. So the mobile phone money payment was a natural growth due to lack of credit card facilities and the need to use less cash.” According to government statistics, 80 % of Tanzania’s 45 million people live in rural areas.

As a value added service, MPesa has not only transformed how people and businesses do transactions, but it has changed lives of many individuals, including impoverished women in various parts of the country. In 2010, Vodacom launched M-Pesa Women Empowerment Initiative (MWEI), with the aim of supporting women entrepreneurs in remote parts of the country or deprived urban areas.

So far MWEI has given loans worth over $ 200 000 in 42 districts in Tanzania, says Grace Lyon, Vodacom Foundation Manager for MWEI. “We have faith in our women who work hard every day to ensure they accomplish greater things in their day-to-day lives. What we are doing is just giving them a boost and they in return have been faithful in paying back the loans.”

Among the beneficiaries of the interest-free loans disbursed recently is Tausi Mjape from Dar es Salaam’s Temeke District. She is one of more than 400 women entrepreneurs who will now be able to start up new businesses or expand their existing ones. “It has not been easy for me to expand my business”, says Tausi Mjape, who operates a small food stall.

“With my small business I am not able to access a loan due to the requirements needed by the normal banks. Even when I am eligible for one I still face the challenge of very high interest rates.” Via the MPesa Women Empowerment Initiative, she received 50,000 shillings to invest in her business. MWEI loans disbursements and repayments are done through M-Pesa.

Women who do not have access to loans from financial institutions are asked to form groups and receive an M-Pesa cash float (interest-free) of between 5,000 shillings to 150,000 shillings.

MWEI is unique in the sense that whenever a member of a group repays, the money is given to another member of that group, making repayment a priority among members while at the same time ensuring that more and more women get access to the interest-free loans. This is one of the many ways that M-Pesa is changing the lives of Tanzania’s poor.
Source:Dailynews

Pay fees without queuing with M-pesa


Thuraya, Airtel in satellite partnership

Thuraya Telecommunications Company has partnered with Bharti Airtel to provide Airtel subscribers with mobile satellite products and services in 17 countries in Africa through Thuraya’s satellite network in Africa’s most remote areas.
Airtel Africa will sell Thuraya’s products and airtime packages at its retail outlets and via its enterprise account team.

It is expected that Thuraya satellite network will help bridge the digital divide by extension of mobile networks into remote or rural areas by providing an immediate and cost-effective way for Airtel to extend its coverage, while generating new revenue streams and providing vital connectivity.
“Thuraya’s partnership with Airtel Africa is a very positive development in bridging the digital divide in Africa. We recognise the massive impact that access to reliable communications can have on the lives of ordinary people,” Samer Halawi, chief executive officer (CEO) of Thuraya, said.
“Thuraya’s robust satellite network will enable Airtel Africa to provide its consumer and enterprise users with reliable, high quality voice and broadband services. Thuraya is well-positioned to support customer-centric mobile operators like Airtel Africa that are looking to extend their network and services with satellite-based solutions.”
Christian de Faria, CEO of Airtel Africa said: “Providing reliable connectivity in many remote parts of Africa can be challenging. This partnership enables us to further extend our coverage and services for businesses and general consumers who live or work in very remote areas.
“Thuraya’s satellite services will be combined with the reliable, high-quality voice calls and broadband access that our customers are accustomed to experiencing in our urban centres.”
Source:humanipo

Mwanamakuka Awards to be sponsored by Airtel Tanzania

Airtel Tanzania has announced it will be sponsoring this year’s Mwanamakuka Awards, an initiative aimed at empowering women from different backgrounds to achieve sustainable economic development from chronic poverty.

The Mwanamakuka Awards Family Festival is scheduled to be held on March 14, to celebrate this year’s International Women’s Day.
“Airtel believes that entrepreneurship is essential to achieving economic development and poverty eradication. Through this support, Airtel will be promoting the empowerment of women”, said Jane Matinde from Airtel Tanzania.
“We will continue demonstrating our commitment to initiatives that will support marginalised women and promoting national development.
“If you support a woman you have supported the whole family. At Airtel we are geared towards empowering communities through our network and social support initiatives”.
Airtel Tanzania has been sponsoring the awards since 2011.
“The intention of the Mwanamakuka Awards is to inspire and encourage women to face each day optimistically as they see their dreams come true. To this end, we need to ensure that the exercise and outcomes are profound and transformative,” said Maryam Shamo, chairperson and project coordinator of the Unity of Women Friends (UWF).

Tanzania’s UDOM students to create software for Nokia, Microsoft

Students at Tanzania’s University of Dodoma are set to start creating software for Microsoft platforms such as Windows and Nokia mobile phones from next month.
The programme will soon be extended to other institutions within Tanzania, including the University of Dar es Salaam.

“We have a special agreement with Microsoft, which is the world’s leading computer software and hardware maker, through which Tanzania students can create software for a number of the tech giants’ desktop and mobile gadgets,” said George Mulamula, chief executive officer (CEO) of the Dar es Salaam Technology and Business Incubator (DTBi).
The Commission for Science and Technology (COSTECH), which DTBi belongs to, has also signed an agreement with IBM that will see the students make use of the various patents filed by the company for the creation of software.
“That follows President Jakaya Kikwete’s recent visit to the United States where he toured the IBM facilities and the tech giant agreed to come to Tanzania and lay open all its patents for the local students to tr and make own technological inventories based on the patents,” said an official.
“The aim of our series of training is to enable young graduates from higher institutes of learning to stop tarmacing in search of jobs but instead create their own enterprises and employ fellow youngsters,” said Collins Gumbu, DTBi business development manager.
Source:humanipo

Vodacom Tanzania seeks $150 mln to boost capital

* Firm seeks to raise $150 mln over five years
* To raise $90 mln locally, the rest from foreign sources
DAR ES SALAAM, July 23 (Reuters) - Vodacom Tanzania, an arm of leading South African mobile operator Vodacom (VODJ.J), has secured a $90 million syndicated loan from local banks, in a five-year deal expected to raise $150 million, the company said.
Telecoms is one the country's most vibrant industries, growing 20.5 percent last year compared with 20.1 percent a year before.
"This funding is critical to our growth plans and will go a long way in facilitating better service for the consumer," Vodacom Tanzania Managing Director Dietlof Mare said in a statement seen by Reuters on Thursday.

Vodacom did not give more details of what the money will be used for.
"The initial $90 million multi-currency financing has been completely sourced through local banks along with Citibank Tanzania Limited," the statement said, adding that the bank would be responsible for raising the remaining $60 million overseas.
As at end-March, Vodacom had just over 5.67 million subscribers out of the country's total 13.88 million mobile users, up from just over 5.4 million customers at last year's close.
The east African nation of 40 million had 13 million mobile phone subscribers at the end of 2008.
Eight other local banks were involved in raising the local part of the loan. (Reporting by George Obulutsa; Editing by Mike Nesbit)
Source: reuters

MTN, Orange, Airtel to sell of towers in Nigeria and Tanzania

South Africa’s Vodacom has to date, sold 1 149 mobile network towers to Helios Towers Africa in Tanzania.
According to media reports, MTN plans to sell towers valued at $1 billion in Nigeria, and Bharti of Indiais selling about 15,000 of its towers across 17 countries for about  $2 billion. Orange is said to be looking at selling a number of towers in sub-Saharan Africa and Egypt.
According to Business Day, Bharti’s sale is likely to result in a split of the towers between multiple buyers, one of the people said. Carriers in Africa are offloading their assets, which cost more to run on the continent than in other parts of the world because of the need for backup generators and batteries to guard against power failures.
A representative who wished to remain anonymous, hinted that IHS, American Tower Corporation, Helios Towers and Eaton Towers could be in talks to acquire the assets of MTN and Bharti. ”These companies, backed by cash from wealthy investors including billionaire George Soros and Goldman Sachs Group Inc., have bought thousands of towers from carriers in the region in the past two years.” he says.
South Africa’s Vodacom has to date, sold 1 149 mobile network towers to Helios Towers Africa in Tanzania.
source: ITnews

Tanzania Heath worker uses mobile for Distance Diagnosis in Remote Ares


Clinical officers use mobile phones to take pictures and notes of patients in remote areas of Tanzania. The information on complex medical cases can be shared with specialists from Dar es Salaam and abroad via the iPath telemedicine platform. Specialists view the information and provide advice remotely.



Kesanta works at the Ilembula Lutheran Hospital and frequently visits people on location in the isolated Iringa region. As a clinical officer he treats patients, but for complex medical cases he needs specialist advice. Kesanta gets this advice by using an online telemedicine platform called iPath. With this system, x-rays, photos of skin conditions and tissue samples and patient information can be sent to specialist doctors for consultation online. Recently Kesanta started to use his mobile phone to access the telemedicine platform.

Recently Kesanta encountered a three year old boy who suffered from malnutrition and had a large infection (a hole in his cheek). The clinical officer used his phone to take a picture of the infection and uploaded this with patient information to the telemedicine platform. A specialist doctor in Dar es Salaam saw the case and advised Kesanta how to treat the infection and what medicine to prescribe. Now the boy’s cheek is healing without him having to travel to the city or having to pay extra for specialist treatment.

Although computers can also be used to upload cases, Kesanta prefers his mobile phone. “Network coverage is often too poor to use an office computer or laptop to upload our telemedicine cases. With a camera phone with GPRS connection, it is very simple to upload cases from anywhere. We discovered that a mobile phone can open the web program needed for telemedicine quite easily and fast.”

Telemedicine is supported by IICD in Tanzania. IICD’s partner the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Tanzania runs a chain of hospitals in Tanzania, including the Ilembula Lutheran Hospital.

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