Today's Bulletin: December 26, 2024

More results...

Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
Filter by Categories
Africacom
AfricaCom 2024
AI
Apps
Apps
Banking
Broadcast
Cabsat
CABSAT
Cloud
Column
Content
Corona
DTT
eCommerce
Editorial
Education
Entertainment
Events
Fintech
Fixed
Gitex
Gitex Africa
GSMA Cape Town
Healthcare
IBC
Industry Voices
Infrastructure
IoT
MNVO Nation Africa
Mobile
Mobile Payments
Music
MWC Barcelona
MWC Kigali
News
Opinion Piece
Q&A
Satellite
Security
Software
Startups
Streaming
Technology
TechTalks
TechTalkThursday
Telecoms
Utilities
Video Interview
Follow us

Covid-19: Virus-tracking app launched in Tunisia

May 20, 2020
2 min read
Author: Editorial Team

Tunisia on Tuesday launched a contact-tracing mobile phone app that identifies and alerts users who may have had contact with others infected with the new coronavirus.

The E7mi application, available on Android and awaiting validation for Apple’s iOS, was developed by a Tunisian start-up specialised in digital marketing tools for foreign companies, the health ministry told AFP.

Like the French StopCovid application, E7mi — Arabic for “protect” — is not based on contact tracing technology developed by Apple or Google.

If a user tests positive for COVID-19, Tunisia’s Observatory of Emerging Diseases (ONME) contacts other users whose telephones have been detected close to the infected user’s device.

“We started in March when we heard about the TraceTogether app in Singapore, but we wanted to do something suitable for Tunisia.

Akil Agati, head of the Wizz Labs start-up

Users “will not report themselves infected, to avoid false alarms, and users who have been notified of being in contact with a sick person will also receive a phone call from the ONME so there can be follow-up,” he said.

We have been faster than many other countries” in launching such an app, he added. In France, the government plans to launch its StopCovid app on June 2. Tunisia’s health ministry approved E7mi after three weeks of testing. An awareness campaign will encourage people to install the application, but “if download rates remain low, we may change our strategy.

Bassem Kchaou, Health Ministry official

This could include making downloading the application compulsory for people to enter large public spaces.

Personal data will be archived for 14 days under the control of the National Personal Data Protection Authority and will only be used by ONME for contacting people about coronavirus, Nagati said

Follow us on LinkedIn

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our weekly newsletter and get the latest industry insights right in your inbox!

Please wait...

Thank you for sign up!