by MARCUS MUSHONGA HARARE – ECONET Wireless Zimbabwe added 103 base stations countrywide in the third quarter of the past year during a drive to improve coverage. The mobile operator
by MARCUS MUSHONGA HARARE – ECONET Wireless Zimbabwe added 103 base stations countrywide in the third quarter of the past year during a drive to improve coverage. The mobile operator
by ANYANG GARANG JUBA – SOUTH Sudan is looking to China to develop its telecommunications sector. This builds on the deepening relations between the world’s newest country and the Asian
by AKANI CHAUKE JOHANNESBURG – AFRICA has recorded a year-on-year decline in cyber-attacks over the past year. This is according to Check Point Research, which has released its December 2025 Global
by AKANI CHAUKE JOHANNESBURG – MTN South Africa is providing digital devices to selected schools across the country as part of the Department of Basic Education’s (DBE) Back-to-School Campaign. This initiative,
by HAOYU ZHANG BEIJING – SOLAR power has moved from the margins of global energy policy to its center, as governments accelerate deployment to cut emissions and secure electricity supply. According
by MARIA MACHARIA NAIROBI – KENYA’S National Treasury has initiated the process of selling the 15-percent stake in Safaricom to the Vodacom Group. Officials from the Treasury have engaged National Assembly
by HASSAN ONYANGO KAMPALA – A temporary shutdown of public internet access and selected mobile services in Uganda raises doubts regarding the fairness of the upcoming general elections. The Uganda Communications
by SAVIOUS KWINIKA JOHANNESBURG — THE rapid global expansion of low-Earth-orbit (LEO) satellite internet systems such as SpaceX’s Starlink has reignited a critical debate in South Africa whether advanced connectivity infrastructure
by AKANI CHAUKE JOHANNESBURG – TELECOM cyber risks that intensified in 2025 will extend into 2026 as new technologies add fresh operational exposure, according to Kaspersky’s latest Security Bulletin. The review
by SAVIOUS KWINIKAJOHANNESBURG – ACROSS Africa, a quiet but profound economic transformation is unfolding. Artificial intelligence (AI), once perceived as a technology reserved for wealthy nations, is increasingly reshaping African