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The Gaseleka Telecentre, Northern Province, South AfricaDate2001
Dev IssuesRural Development CountrySouth Africa RegionAfrica Project Title / Official Policy NameGaseleka Telecentre
SummaryThis summary is part of a research project carried out between March and October 2006 in support of the International Institute for Communication and Development (IICD), one of The Communication Initiative (The CI)'s partners. Gaseleka is situated in a very remote and rural area of Northern Province; economically the poorest province, it also has the worst access to telecommunications of any province in South Africa. Instituted by the Telecommunications Act of 1996, the South African Universal Service Agency’s (USA) mandate is to provide access to information and communication technology (ICT) services denied to the majority of people during Apartheid. The Gaseleka telecentre was established by USA in 1998 after an open invitation, sent out to communities to apply for ICT services, resulted in 500 applicants, of whom 30 were chosen based on various social, political, geographic and economic criteria. The primary objective of this project was the provision of telephones and computers to areas with poor access to communication services. The Gaseleka telecentre is owned by the local branch of the South African National Civic Organisation (SANCO), directed by a special sub-committee of 15 people, and operated by two telecentre mangers and a computer trainer. As of the writing of this case study, the centre had six phone lines, of which four are used for telephones, one for fax, and one for the internet; five Pentium computers, which are running Windows 95 and Office 97, four older 386 Olivetti computers that run on DOS 6.22 and Windows 3.1; a Canon BJC4200 black-and-white/colour printer, a Mustek 1200 SP colour scanner, a Cannon fax machine, and an Olivetti 8416 photocopier. Services at the telecentre have mostly been based on access to the above mentioned equipment. Local schools, the Community Policing Forum, Department of Health and Welfare, small businesses and local political groupings are major users of the centre’s computer equipment, but most other people utilise the centre to make telephone calls, send faxes, and photocopy. Recently, services have been expanded, in response to need and opportunity, to include computer training. PartnersSouth African Universal Service Agency (USA) Outcomes Impact ResultsThe following outcomes have been observed:
Lessons LearnedThe following lessons were noted:
Future DirectionsThe Gaseleka telecentre is currently talking to UNISA about becoming a “learning centre,” which would enable it to receive some of the course books for a training library and earn a percentage of the course fees. Effort is also underway to establish a local radio station. ContactPeter Benjamin
Africa Programme Manager
SourceTitle: Latchem, Colin and Walker, David [eds.] "Chapter 7: The Gaseleka Telecentre, Northern Province, South Africa" Telecentres: Case studies and key issues. Placed on the Communication Initiative site July 06 2006 Last Updated April 07 2008 |
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