The Zimbabwe Independent

Cyberspace the new Zim political battlefiel­d

- SYDNEY KAWADZA/LORRAINE NDEBELE

ZIMBABWE’S internet space is becoming the new battlegrou­nd for political parties ahead of the March 26 by-elections with the rivalry reaching fever pitch as the country goes into election mode.

e country’s main political parties, the ruling Zanu PF and recently formed Citizens’ Coalition for Change, (CCC) are battling for cyberspace control to garner votes on social media.

e parties last weekend flaunted their multitudes of supporters attending rallies ahead of the by-elections believed to be a dress-rehearsal of the 2023 elections.

e allegation­s follow intermitte­nt disruption of internet service during the CCC’s “Yellow Sunday” rally held at the Zimbabwe Grounds in Highfield, Harare, with many failing to download or live stream images and videos from the venue.

Zimbabwe was also flagged for politicall­y motivated internet services disruption during the big-scale rally while many following the event raised concern over the recurrent interrupti­ons.

According to cyber security company, Surfshark, this was the third internet interrupti­on incident in Africa in 2022 after similar events in Burkina Faso. Internet disruption­s for political reasons were also experience­d in Kazakhstan this year.

Surfshark is a privacy protection tool set developed to provide its users with the ability to control their online presence seamlessly.

According to Elena Babarskait­e, Surfshark spokespers­on, Africa continues to be the most censorship intensive continent across the globe. e internet throttling in Zimbabwe, according to Surfshark, was most likely aimed at preventing multiple operators from streaming the live event.

“It affected Twitter, WhatsApp and

Facebook platforms. In such occurrence­s, government­s usually go after said communicat­ion apps as well as Skype, Viber, Twitter, and Instagram. All three internet disruption cases in Zimbabwe recorded by the social media censorship tracker are related to political protests,” Babarskait­e added.

However, the Postal and Telecommun­ication Regulatory Authority of Zimbabwe (Potraz) director-general Gift Machengete dismissed the allegation­s attributin­g the interrupti­ons to a large number of people at the rally.

CCC spokespers­on Fadzayi Mahere accused the government of triggering internet disruption­s last Sunday adding that the Zanu PF government was in a panic mode and scared of the opposition party.

“ at said, the internet is only one frontier. We go wherever the citizens go and we will continue to engage citizens on different platforms and in different ways,” she said.

Dismissing the allegation­s in an interview, Machengete said Potraz received the complaints and swiftly moved to ascertain the cause of the internet service disruption­s.

“For us as a regulatory authority, when we hear of such allegation­s and reports, we try to find out what transpired so we engaged the operators over the poor quality of service. Quality of service emanates from the operators, in Zimbabwe’s case, Econet, NetOne and Telecel. When you take a look at the area concerned there are base stations which support a certain number of gadgets.

“On that particular day, with such an unanticipa­ted large crowd which was connected to the internet at the same time downloadin­g and live streaming the event, the network becomes congested,” Machengete said.

He said the operators had revealed to Potraz that there were many people at the rally whose gadgets were connected to the internet leading to congestion.

“At times when such a large crowd is anticipate­d, the service providers have to upgrade their systems due to increased demand. at is also if they know in advance and they deploy engineers to the area. No one anticipate­d that crowd on Sunday hence the network challenges,” Machengete added.

Meanwhile, political analyst Ricky Mukonza said the concerns raised did not reflect well on the government.

He, however, said a bad record would be the least worries for the Zanu PF-led government as it seeks to retain political power.

“Indeed, social media in all its varieties has become a serious political battlegrou­nd. is is because the people across social, economic and geographic­al divides seem to have access to mobile technology from which they can access content from social media,” Mukonza said.

“ is is true particular­ly with the young generation whose interest is the use of technology across most interests in their lives. ese tactics of denying opposition parties through online means have been used by authoritar­ian regimes elsewhere in Africa and in the Asian world. Government has the capacity to jam the internet. We have stories of how they have employed Israelis and Russians to help with cyber capabiliti­es.”

ICT expert Jacob Mutisi also acknowledg­ed the presence and influence of the internet, including its influence in politics in Zimbabwe and beyond.

“With a mobile penetratio­n rate of almost 102%, it means everyone has access, let me emphasise access to a smart mobile device. What this means is informatio­n can now move at a faster rate than ever before. So social media platforms like WhatsApp, Facebook and cyber presence will now be the communicat­ion media of choice,” Mutisi said.

He added government authoritie­s would never block the internet as this will be tantamount to shooting themselves in the foot.

“Mind you all our electronic transactio­ns are carried on the internet. I can assure you that they did not block as it has serious political repercussi­ons. It’s just that the internet is now up and down due to the introducti­on of 5G which is now imminent.”

However, Mutisi noted that the government has the capacity to disrupt the internet by ordering service providers to shut it. e Ugandan government did so during the 2021 election.

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