Zimbabwe wants to bring fast internet to remote villages cut off from digital services. The government runs a fiber cable project through Zesa Holdings between Zvishavane and Tokwe areas. Workers planned to start pulling cables on June 7 but equipment broke down. Teams must rent new machines for $1,150 per set to string 40 kilometers of fiber lines.
Acting Powertel director Willard Nyagwande manages the high-speed internet expansion. Crews clear thick bushes around Great Zimbabwe University where power lines carry the new cables. Workers hang fiber equipment on existing 11-kilovolt electricity poles throughout the region. The project creates unlimited internet access across previously disconnected communities.
Companies expect to finish the work next Tuesday after clearing vegetation. The fiber network forms a triangle pattern that covers all of Zimbabwe with fast bandwidth. Rural families will connect to online services for the first time through the new infrastructure. Electric utility poles support both power delivery and internet signals for remote areas.
Acting Powertel director Willard Nyagwande manages the high-speed internet expansion. Crews clear thick bushes around Great Zimbabwe University where power lines carry the new cables. Workers hang fiber equipment on existing 11-kilovolt electricity poles throughout the region. The project creates unlimited internet access across previously disconnected communities.
Companies expect to finish the work next Tuesday after clearing vegetation. The fiber network forms a triangle pattern that covers all of Zimbabwe with fast bandwidth. Rural families will connect to online services for the first time through the new infrastructure. Electric utility poles support both power delivery and internet signals for remote areas.