Broadband: SA earmarks R250m for national push

Siyabonga Cwele, Minister of State Security, Nathi Mathethwa, Minister of Police, Helen Zille, Western Cape Premier, at Parliament during a media briefing after a meeting about the threats of xenophobia sweeping across the country. Picture: Gareth Smit Reporter: Siyabonga from Political Bureau

Siyabonga Cwele, Minister of State Security, Nathi Mathethwa, Minister of Police, Helen Zille, Western Cape Premier, at Parliament during a media briefing after a meeting about the threats of xenophobia sweeping across the country. Picture: Gareth Smit Reporter: Siyabonga from Political Bureau

Published May 10, 2016

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Johannesburg - South Africa has set aside R250 million ($16.5 million) to start the first phase of broadband roll-out across Africa’s most industrialised economy and will approach the private sector, banks and development institutions about additional funding, the telecommunications minister said.

Construction will start in three months following various delays, Siyabonga Cwele said in a phone interview on Monday.

Read: Telkom to lead broadband roll-out

The total cost of the project could rise to as much as R62 billion, according to market research commissioned by the ministry. Further detail will be included as part of the government’s telecommunications budget, scheduled to be announced on Tuesday.

“This is a top priority for the South African government,” Cwele said. “The plan is to approach local and international development financing institutions and see what their appetite is in terms of funding the broadband Internet roll-out in South Africa.”

The government has held talks with Telkom, the former national phone monopoly still part-owned by the state, to lead the broadband roll-out, people familiar with the matter said in February.

The ruling African National Congress has pledged to extend broadband access to every household by the end of this decade, improving connectivity in one of the world’s stragglers in Internet access.

South Africa is striving to stimulate growth as falling commodity prices and the worst drought in more than a century curb economic expansion to the slowest pace since a 2009 recession. The unemployment rate rose to the highest in at least eight years in the first quarter as factories, wholesalers and retailers cut jobs.

“Providing broadband Internet on a national level to people will help us to stimulate growth and create jobs,” Cwele said.

 

BLOOMBERG

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