Telecommunications in Tanzania
Telecommunications in Tanzania include radio, television, fixed and mobile telephones, and the Internet available in mainland Tanzania and the semiautonomous Zanzibar archipelago.
Regulation and licensing
In 2005, mainland Tanzania, but not the semiautonomous Zanzibar archipelago, modified its licensing system for electronic communications, modelling it on the approach successfully pioneered in Malaysia in the late 1990s where traditional "vertical" licenses are replaced by "horizontal" licenses. Called the "Converged Licensing Framework ", this reform was the first of its kind put into practice on the African continent, and allows investors to concentrate on their area of expertise across a larger number of previously separate sectors. This reform should, among other things, facilitate the arrival of telephone services over cable television networks, television services over telecommunications networks, and Internet services over all types of networks.Under the Converged Licensing Framework four categories of license are available:
- Network facility, the provision of any element or combination of physical infrastructure used principally for, or in connection with, the provision of Content services and other Application services, but not including customer premises equipment;
- Network service, a service for carrying information in the form of speech or other sound, data, text or images, by means of guided or unguided electromagnetic energy, but not including services provided solely on the customer side of the network boundary;
- Application service, the reselling of electronic communication services to end users; and
- Content service, a service offered for sound, data, text or images whether still or moving except where transmitted on private communication.
- 21 network facility operators: 8 international and national, 11 national, and 2 regional;
- 17 network service operators: 8 international and national, 6 national, and 3 regional;
- 91 application service operators: 1 international, 15 international and national, 62 national, 11 regional, and 2 district;
- 85 radio content service operators: 6 national + commercial, 10 regional + commercial, 7 regional + non-commercial, 30 district + commercial, and 29 district + non-commercial;
- 30 television content service operators: 5 national + commercial, 4 regional + commercial, 1 regional + non-commercial, 6 district + commercial, and 17 district + non-commercial.
Radio and television
- A state-owned national radio station and more than 40 privately owned radio stations are in operation.
- A state-owned TV station and multiple privately owned TV stations are in operation.
- The transmissions of several international broadcasters are available.
The semiautonomous Zanzibari government controls the content of all public and private radio and television broadcasts in its islands. Even in the case of state television broadcast from the mainland, there was a delay in the feed, allowing Zanzibari censors to intervene. However, Zanzibari radio stations operate relatively independently, often reading the content of national dailies, including articles critical of the Zanzibari government.
Telephones
- Calling code: +255
- International call prefix: 000
- Main lines: 161,100 lines in use, 133rd in the world.
- Mobile cellular: 27.2 million lines, 39th in the world.
- Telephone system: telecommunications services are marginal; fixed-line telephone network inadequate with less than 1 connection per 100 persons; system operating below capacity and being modernized for better service; Very Small Aperture Terminal system under construction; mobile-cellular service, aided by multiple providers, is increasing rapidly and in 2011 exceeded a subscriber base of 50 telephones per 100 persons; trunk service provided by open-wire, microwave radio relay, tropospheric scatter, and fiber-optic cable; some links being made digital.
- Communications cables: landing point for two fiber-optic cables :
- * SEACOM submarine and terrestrial high speed fibre-optic cable linking the countries of the east and west coasts of Africa to each other and on to Europe and India; and
- * the EASSy fiber-optic submarine cable system linking East Africa with Europe, and North America.
- Satellite earth stations: 2 Intelsat .
Some of the mobile phone companies operating in Tanzania are:
- Airtel Tanzania
- MIC Tanzania Limited formerly Mobitel
- Tanzania Telecommunications Company Limited
- Viettel Tanzania Limited
- Vodacom Tanzania
- , providing service in Zanzibar, owned by Millicom, the government of Zanzibar, and Meeco International of Tanzania.
Internet
- Top-level domain:.tz
- Internet users: 7.2 million users; 13.1% of the population, 182nd in the world ;
- Fixed broadband: 3,753 subscriptions, 164th in the world; less than 0.05% of the population, 187th in the world.
- Wireless broadband: 698,531 subscriptions, 81st in the world; 1.5% of the population, 130th in the world.
- Internet hosts: 26,074 hosts, 110th in the world.
- IPv4: 846,152 addresses allocated as of 27 November 2014, 0.02 percent of the world total, 17.9 addresses per 1,000 people.
Internet service providers
Some of the Internet Service Providers operating in Tanzania are:- Africa Online
- Afsat Communications Tanzania Limited
- Arusha Node Marie
- Benson Online
- Cats-Net
- Maisha Broadband
- Kicheko
- Raha
- SimbaNet
- Spicenet
- Tansat
- Tanzania Telecommunications Company Limited]
- University of Dar es Salaam Computing Centre
- Vizocom
- ZanLink
- ComNet-TZ
Data operators
- Afsat Communications Tanzania Limited
- Alink Telecom Tanzania Limited, formerly DATEL.
- SatCom Networks Africa Limited
- Six Telecoms Company Limited
- SimbaNet
- Spicenet
- Startel Tanzania Limited, also known as raha
- Tansat
- Tanzania Telecommunications Company Limited.
Censorship and surveillance
Freedom of speech
The constitution provides for freedom of speech, but does not explicitly provide for freedom of the press. A permit is required for reporting on police or prison activities, and journalists need special permission to attend meetings in the Zanzibar House of Representatives. Anyone publishing information accusing a Zanzibari representative of involvement in illegal activities is liable to a fine of not less than 250,000 Tanzanian shillings , three years' imprisonment, or both. Nothing in the law specifies whether this penalty stands if the allegation is proven true. Media outlets often practice self-censorship to avoid conflict with the government.The law generally prohibits arbitrary interference with privacy, family, home, or correspondence without a search warrant, but the government does not consistently respect these prohibitions. It is widely believed that security forces monitor telephones and correspondence of some citizens and foreign residents. The actual nature and extent of this practice is unknown.
Under the Electronic and Postal Communications Regulations 2018, blogs, online forums, and internet radio and television operations, must register with the government as an online content provider, and pay an annual fee. The fee is roughly equivalent to the annual income in Tanzania. Online content providers may not post obscene or explicit content, hate speech, content that "causes annoyance", incites harm or crime, or threatens national security and public safety. Violators may be fined or have their licences revoked.