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SA’s Minister of Communication Assures Development Towards Full State Connectivity by 2024

November 26, 2021
3 min read
Author: Editorial Team

The Minister of Communications, Khumbudzo Ntshavheni, says Government is reviewing its plans to ensure that all South Africans have access to connectivity at their home by 2024.

Speaking at the annual Southern Africa Telecommunication Networks and Applications Conference (SATNAC), Minister Ntshavheni said the European Union had committed itself to 1 terabyte to the home by 2025, and challenged the ICT sector to commit to similar targets for the country.

“The challenge will be what South Africa should commit to given the development disparities that are not only a result of class differences but the geolocation of the person – the urban/rural divide. It’s not just about getting the services out there. Access to connectivity has become a basic need. It is as much a basic need as access to water and access to electricity – because it determines access to education, access to health, access to work which are fundamental for our survival.”

Khumbudzo Ntshavheni, Minister of Communications, South Africa

Telkom Group CEO, Sipho Maseko echoed the minister’s sentiments.

“Big data, analytics, machine learning and AI can all assist business and world leaders to avoid making errors of calculation and prediction or understanding key trends. All of these things are good, and they helpful only if they can have impact in society.”

Sipho Maseko, CEO, Telkom Group

Maseko said this will require long term strategies in which all stakeholders are aligned on the outcomes.

“Alignment does not mean endorsement, but alignment actually means that all of us realise what needs to be achieved. We may have fundamental problems here and there, but actually we accept the outcome that we want to achieve needs to be realised.”

Sipho Maseko, CEO, Telkom Group

Minister Ntshavheni called for research and development projects to be expedited and taken to market without delay. She told conference delegates that the digital divide did not only exist in society but in government itself.

“The bulk of government administration and services yet to be digitised, we are confronted by the challenge of how do we leapfrog public service into the future into new ways of working.”

Khumbudzo Ntshavheni, Minister of Communications, South Africa

She said this will require reskilling public servants, and working closely with local and global stakeholders in the sector.

Ntshavheni said creating the capacity to deliver increased connectivity will require the acceleration of spectrum to accommodate increased 5G capabilities.

She said government is “doggedly pursuing digital migration and we have already switched off all analogue SABC sits in the Free State”. The Northern Cape will have its last site switched off within the next week.

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