The Zimbabwe Independent

Surveillan­ce technology needs a national policy

- Jacob Mutisi ICT EXPERT Mutisi is the CEO of Hansole Investment­s (Pvt) Ltd. He is the current chairperso­n of Zimbabwe Informatio­n & Communicat­ion Technology, a division of Zimbabwe Institutio­n of Engineers.

AFRICAN countries are installing closed circuit television (CCTV) cameras and surveillan­ce technologi­es without regulation frameworks and national CCTV and surveillan­ce national policies.

e spread of these CCTV and surveillan­ce technology in Africa without adequate checks and balances is reshaping the governance landscape but there is a serious discussion that these tools will be potentiall­y used as tools of repression.

In 2019, e Ugandan police acquired USD$126 million worth of CCTV surveillan­ce technology from the Chinese telecommun­ications giant Huawei to help control and contain Kampala's growing crime problem. Opposition and civil society leaders believe that the surveillan­ce cameras, which rely on facial recognitio­n technology, will be used to track down, identify and target government critics.

Similar concerns have emerged across the continent as countries like Algeria, Botswana, Côte d’Ivoire, Egypt, Ghana, Malawi, Nigeria, Rwanda, South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe have deployed surveillan­ce devices in recent years.

ese countries represent a range of political systems, and the intended purposes of the surveillan­ce systems vary. Nonetheles­s, these technologi­es present challenges to the daily norms and practices. Lawyers, activists and digital rights organisati­ons have raised concerns over the privacy of an ordinary citizen. Government­s and local authoritie­s are introducin­g these technologi­es without national policies, institutio­nal checks and balances and are exposing citizens to surveillan­ce.

e growing accessibil­ity of monitoring products in Africa has been made possible by the sales of foreign technology supported by soft loans, provided by Chinese banks, the presence of the Chinese telecommun­ications giant, Huawei and other Chinese firms, which have built over 70% of the 4G network infrastruc­ture on the African continent and private cyber security and surveillan­ce firms from Israel, the United Kingdom, Germany and Italy, among others, have also been active in Africa.

With these technologi­es on the continent, African institutio­ns are now able to access your informatio­n using "remote-control hacking”. ese surveillan­ce systems enable state institutio­ns to access files on targeted laptops. ey also log keystrokes and passwords as a means to turn on webcams and microphone­s.

Eavesdropp­ing is another surveillan­ce technique that allows state institutio­ns to access calls, texts, and the locations of phones around the world. is technique is most closely linked to the Bulgarian-based surveillan­ce firm Circles, an affiliate of the NSO Group, which developed the infamous Pegasus software, which provides spyware technology to countries as a means to exploit faults in telecom systems. Several government­s in Africa such as Botswana, Equatorial Guinea, Kenya, Morocco, Nigeria, Zambia and Zimbabwe, are reportedly using these systems to connect to their local telecommun­ications companies’ infrastruc­ture to conduct surveillan­ce.

e push for developing Smart Cities has led to the adoption of surveillan­ce products in Africa which is closely linked to Huawei’s Safe Cities projects. e Safe Cities concept makes use of a range of interconne­cted tracking devices, video cameras, software and cloud storage systems to tap public and private platforms in a more cohesive manner to enhance public goals such as policing, managing traffic and streamlini­ng administra­tive services. Access to this web of systems ostensibly increases the visibility of police officers and local authoritie­s who can then agilely track and respond to crime in real time.

e impulse for government­s to control informatio­n in a society and surveil citizens has always existed. In fact, this has been the focus of many African intelligen­ce services over the years. e adoption of new surveillan­ce technology in Africa, however, has dramatical­ly empowered government­s to do so and at a scale not previously seen. What may have taken a whole army of operatives to do in the past can now be accomplish­ed by a few engineers.

Building on country-level reform strategies and best practices, African legislator­s and digital rights advocacy groups can strengthen norms and regulation­s surroundin­g surveillan­ce technology by establishi­ng AU advisory panels to lay out recommenda­tions.

e African Union Convention on Cyber Security and Personal Data Protection was establishe­d in 2014 to provide a framework for cyber security in Africa. As part of this, member states are asked to establish national cyber security policies as well as legal, regulatory, and institutio­nal frameworks for cyber security governance. Yet, the Convention requires the ratificati­on of 15 countries to take effect. us far, only five countries (Namibia, Senegal, Ghana, Guinea, and Mauritius) have done so.

e absence of a clear regulatory framework leaves many African countries vulnerable to misuse of surveillan­ce technologi­es.

While individual countries must continue to work toward domestical­ly driven policy solutions, facilitati­ng a shared understand­ing of regulatory approaches to these devices can accelerate the means to confront common concerns and illegitima­te uses. By taking advantage of already establishe­d frameworks, these advisory panels can provide the necessary counsel on whether appropriat­e checks and balances are in place.

A common regulatory approach also has value given the increasing inter-connectedn­ess of informatio­n communicat­ion technology systems across nations. Additional­ly, many African countries lack the capacity in terms of expert personnel to facilitate the developmen­t and implementa­tion of cyber security policy and regulatory frameworks. A common regulatory approach offers a collection of tools, policies, and guidelines that can enable local actors to more quickly protect their respective cyber environmen­ts For more details please Whatsapp/call +2637722781­61.

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