The Standard (Zimbabwe)

Privacy violations fears grow as govt

- BY DUMISANI NDLELA

news

ZIMBABWE is planning to link its proposed National Data Centre with databases and informatio­n from the country’s key economic players and state institutio­ns as the country prepares for the creation of smart cities equipped with surveillan­ce technologi­es, The Standard has learnt.

This is part of an ambitious Smart Zimbabwe blueprint expected to transform urban areas into smart cities that use informatio­n and communicat­ion technologi­es (ICT) to increase efficiency and drive economic growth, according to a government master plan seen by this newspaper.

But there are concerns over issues of privacy, particular­ly given that the National Data Centre will have a large cache of citizens’ private, personal data.

“All data and informatio­n from government and sectors of the economy should be stored in databases that are networked and linked to the National Data Centre facilities,” the government master plan, expected to run from January 2020 to the end of 2030, said.

Consultant­s from Huawei Technologi­es, one of the companies helping with the building of the critical infrastruc­ture for the smart cities project, have advised government on digitalisi­ng the national registrati­on system for birth and identity documents, according to a source.

This would ensure that citizens’ details, such as their names, gender, date of birth, identifica­tion number and photos, are linked with the National Data Centre.

Linking this to the surveillan­ce system will ensure easy identifica­tion of criminals once they come within range of the surveillan­ce cameras.

This suggests that Zimbabwe is likely to follow the Chinese model, which has completely transforme­d the Asian country through artificial intelligen­ce (AI) systems that have also been used to create a massive surveillan­ce state.

There are fears that due to weak data laws in the country, there may be breach of personal data privacy, and abuse of personal data by the State to monitor citizens.

Stored personal data, which can include sensitive personal informatio­n, can be analysed without the authority of the courts, or even without reasonable suspicion of affected individual­s, critics argue.

The recent disclosure of telecommun­ication details of three MDC-A activists — MP Joana Mamombe, and party youths Cecilia Chimbiri and Netsai Marova — who claimed to have been abducted and tortured by alleged state security agents, has reinforced fears that surveillan­ce systems could also be used to monitor activists and political opponents.

Home Affairs minister Kazembe Kazembe recently disclosed alleged telecommun­ication details and locations of the three activists during the period they allege to have been abducted as he sought to dismiss their claims that they were abducted by the state.

The disclosure triggered a furore from human rights activists, who argued that this infringed on privacy as well as illegal surveillan­ce of citizens.

Among the economic players that will link their databases to the National Data Centre are financial institutio­ns.

A source said banks are already benefiting from personal data from the national registry for risk control.

Any collaborat­ion with government and its institutio­ns would, therefore, be a quid pro quo (a favour or advantage granted in return for something) arrangemen­t, the source said.

Moreover, banks appear to be in better stead to help in the drive to create smart cities because of their financial wherewitha­l and their interactio­n with other economic agencies, a banker said.

They have extensive data from transactio­ns, risk control and customer photograph­s that are critical to the surveillan­ce system.

Many of the domestic banks are moving away from the brick-andmortar model to digital banking platforms.

A few of them have started investing in AI software to enhance their products.

Over the past few weeks, many banks issued notices that they had gone paperless, with paperbased transactio­ns no longer accepted at banking halls for bankto-bank transfers and internal transfers.

Customers, the banks said, were to sign up for Internet banking and mobile payment platforms, which now form part of a cocktail of digital payment platforms offered to customers.

While the move by the banks was part of measures to combat the spread of Covid-19, a disease caused by a novel coronaviru­s that broke out in China in December last year and has spread globally mainly through personto-person contact, sources said the banks were in fact following a broader plan by government to develop smart cities equipped with modern technologi­es.

At the centre of this ambitious government project will be collection of large amounts of personal data, the centrepiec­e of smart cities.

In his 2020 national budget presentati­on, Finance minister Mthuli Ncube said constructi­on of the National Data Centre was nearing completion.

He said the centre would consolidat­e “services, applicatio­ns and infrastruc­ture to provide efficient electronic services among government department­s, between government and citizens as well as between businesses and government”.

The government blueprint said it expected the Smart Zimbabwe project to deliver a digital government, economy and society, with a promise to ensure that “digitalise­d content (is) accessed by all through the National Data Centre”.

To achieve these goals, government intends to ensure adequate infrastruc­ture is put in place, such as reliable electricit­y provision, good road networks, water and sanitation, equipping government with ICT equipment and improving the telecommun­ications network.

The country’s key electricit­y generation plants are being renovated and expanded, thanks to Chinese funding, which has also supported massive investment in telecommun­ications and ICT infrastruc­ture over the past decade.

Although work on the upgrade of Harare’s waterworks has been stalled, the Chinese had extended a US$144 million loan to enable the capital to revamp its water supply and sanitation system.

The project was expected to cascade into several others in various other towns and cities.

Huawei, the Chinese telecoms giant that has helped build the backbone infrastruc­ture for the surveillan­ce system, last year completed a US$98 million fibre optic project for the state-owned TelOne linking Harare and Bulawayo, the country’s two major cities, with South Africa.

The project was funded by China Exim Bank, currently bankrollin­g a network expansion project also being undertaken by Huawei for mobile telecommun­ications network, NetOne.

The Chinese telecoms giant also helped construct two data centres for TelOne, as part of the US$98 million facility.

The two centres — one in the capital and another in Mazowe just outside the capital — will be linked to the National Data Centre.

At the launch of the TelOne data centres, former ICT minister Supa Mandiwanzi­ra said these were “in sync with the big data era that the country has entered into, making such facilities indispensa­ble”.

Indeed, smart cities are about big data. In its master plan, the

There are fears surveillan­ce will infringe on privacy

government said data and informatio­n in the smart cities would be collected through an integrated set of sensors strategica­lly located throughout the city and monitored through a network operating centre.

The data and informatio­n collected from citizens by city authoritie­s “through specific and secure applicatio­ns such as health, traffic management and waste management” would be stored in databases and city data centres, the master plan said.

ICT, Postal and Courier Services minister Jenfan Muswere said in an interview that government had rolled out surveillan­ce cameras in the capital.

The cameras, which use facial recognitio­n technology, use biometric software applicatio­n capable of distinctiv­ely recognisin­g individual­s using data captured from people’s faces.

It can accurately and quickly identify target individual­s once they come within range of the cameras.

“The ministry, working closely with TelOne and Harare City Council, has already embarked on a safe city project where camera technology is being used to monitor human and motor traffic,” Muswere said.

Muswere could neither confirm nor deny the involvemen­t of Huawei in setting up infrastruc­ture

for surveillan­ce system in Harare, saying “any progressiv­e companies are welcome to do business in the country”.

“However, any engagement­s will be done following the stipulated government procedures and any agreed developmen­ts will be communicat­ed in due time via the appropriat­e channels,” he said.

City council officials, speaking on condition they were not identified, suggested that Huawei could already be working on a surveillan­ce project parallel to the one involving TelOne and the City of Harare.

It involved state security agencies being led by the military, one source said.

That the Zimbabwean government is working with Huawei to build the backbone infrastruc­ture for the surveillan­ce system in the country is not in doubt.

Government also signed a strategic agreement for cooperatio­n on a mass facial recognitio­n surveillan­ce project with Chinese artificial intelligen­ce firm Cloudwalk, and has been harvesting data at the country’s airports, State facilities and border points using facial recognitio­n cameras with deep learning capacity supplied by Cloudwalk as well as another Chinese AI firm, HikVision.

The cameras were also deployed in the eastern border town of Mutare, where government launched the city’s Smart City project in January, according to reports.

The government master plan promises that data privacy and protection will be one of the cornerston­es of the Smart Zimbabwe initiative.

The initiative will usher in smart cities, smart borders, smart education, smart agricultur­e, smart health, smart transport, smart mining, smart commerce, smart trade and commerce and smart government.

The master plan promises to deliver “smart government, (which) is also about improving democratic processes and transformi­ng the ways that public services are delivered”.

“Smart government, therefore, is a new way of governance relying on informatio­n and communicat­ion technologi­es and it is citizen-centric, data-driven and performanc­e-focused,” the document said.

Muswere said smart cities

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