Liquid Telecom Kenya
has launched a series of countrywide awareness campaigns to protect rural fibre
optic cable networks from vandalism that is costing the country hundreds of
millions of shillings a year.
Fibre optic cable
contains strands of glass fibre inside an insulated casing and is designed to
provide higher bandwidth and transmit signals over longer distances. It
supports most of the world's Internet, cable television and telephone systems.
But the cables are
delicate and any damage can affect thousands of end users, including mobile
operators, banks, government offices, businesses and individuals. The resulting
Internet disruption generally lasts for hours, with fibre repairs requiring the
mobilisation of specialists and equipment to sometimes remote or
difficult-to-access areas.
Most Internet
Service Providers reroute customers to satellite or other types of connectivity
while the repairs are underway, but the connections are often slower, leading
to lost productivity and sales for businesses, and delays and holdups for
consumers. The rerouting can also add
significant costs for ISPs.
However, with the
launch of countrywide barazas, Liquid Telecom Kenya has identified a host of
different reasons for the cuts. For example, people in areas around Nyanchwa
Hill in the western part of Kenya were targeting fibre cables for copper, while
in Kajiado, villagers were targeting the cables to make enclosures for milk and
water storage, as well as for duct as pipes for fire blowing. In Kamakaa area
in Kericho, villagers were using the cables for herding the animals, while in
Muranga and Kirimi, people dug up the cables in search of copper and water
pipes. In Meru, the ducts were being harvested for water pipes.
The study also found
that cables were more likely to be cut in rural areas, even though urban areas
have a higher number of cables in any given area.
“Severing the fibre optic cables causes
service interruption leading to a huge inconvenience to businesses and home
users. It also incurs a high maintenance cost,” said Wilfred Waithaka, Liquid
Telecom Kenya’s Chief Technology Officer.
For these reasons,
Liquid Telecom Kenya is now conducting the rural community awareness programme
in areas prone to vandalism to stop the lifting of cables by organizing barazas
with the local chiefs and village elders, and engaging local youth as site
monitors.
The company has
decentralised the community engagements through its contractors and regional
staff, sensitising villagers to the absence of any resale value in fibre optic
cables and to the importance of the infrastructure within their neighborhood.
The most recent
engagement was in DC-Emali segment in Malili, on one of Kenya’s Internet
backbone paths. The township is currently undergoing intense construction,
especially in areas close to the highway, prompting ongoing barazas with plot
owners and construction workers on the need to protect the cables.
“The need to protect
fibre cables is among the things discussed during barazas. I invite individuals
from Liquid Telecom Kenya and give them the platform to address members of the
community present on the reasons why they should not damage the cables. We have
so far received positive response from youths and residents,” said Emali
township Chief Michael Kivondo.
“We also target contractors and rally them not
to destroy the cables, but instead alert the administration in advance. We have
had instances where people call me to come and confirm whether what they have
found underground are the cables and we figure out what we can do to make sure
they are not damaged,” said Chief Kivondo.
This is a continuous
process conducted once a month in different places along Liquid Telecom Kenya’s
5,000km Kenyan fibre network and is supported by weekly route patrols to detect
any activity exposing the cables.
“We also ensure that
whenever there is a Liquid Telecom Kenya cable laying project, the contractors
engage the locals for the manual work, to earn a living, and leave portions of
the off-cut fibre optic cables exposed for them to easily detect the real
content of the cables underground,” said Waithaka.
Liquid Telecom Kenya
has also engaged local youth as site monitors to help spread awareness on the
importance of the cable networks. Some of the communities have welcomed the
positive gains of this arrangement in actively engaging youth in community
responsibilities.
The Internet Service
Provider then receives reports from route patrols and from the site monitors
that drive the agenda for further awareness raising, as a proactive mitigation
of vandalism. “If cable vandalism goes unchecked, it has serious implications
on smooth communication services,” said Waithaka.
In Kenya, tampering
with, vandalising, damaging or removing any telecommunications infrastructure
is considered an offence and attracts a penalty of a fine not less than Sh5m,
or imprisonment of not less than 10 years, or both.
The proposed
Critical Infrastructure Bill which is still in the initial stages is expected
to elevate the status of telco infrastructure recognising, for the first time,
fibre optic cables as critical infrastructure and giving them the same security
as electricity and water infrastructure. The Bill also intends to coordinate
different sector players with regards to installation of infrastructure to
avoid damages.
No comments:
Post a Comment