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AFRICA NEWS
Africans consumers targeted as key by electronics firms
by Staff Writers
Cape Town (AFP) March 25, 2012


From solar-powered lights to televisions that can withstand power blackouts, electronics mega-firms are wooing African consumers with products that target local, often challenging, environments.

Samsung Electronics, the world's largest maker of flat panels, memory chips and flat-screen televisions, aims to grow its business on the continent to $10 billion (7.5 billion euros) by 2015 in a five-fold increase from last year.

"This year we aim to get around three billion" dollars, said Park Kwang Kee, the company's Africa president and chief executive.

"Our base is still not as big as other continents so... our growth rate is higher than the other continents. Other than South Africa, we have shown more than 100 percent for the last two years."

The International Monetary Fund predicts Sub-Saharan Africa's economy will grow by 5.5 percent this year, outpacing all regions apart from developing Asian markets, with some countries like Angola set for double-digit growth.

The continent's population mix -- from massive poverty to a booming, brand-savvy middle class -- offers varied opportunities despite constraints such as a lack of water and electricity, which also force an eco-friendly shift.

"Africa is seen as increasingly important with higher economic growth rates than Europe or the US and with a fast-growing middle class," said Nick Kelso, spokesman for Philips Lighting Africa.

"It is also important to realise that Africa is not one entity. Peoples and cultures differ widely and this all needs to be taken into account when designing new product solutions."

Samsung has a dedicated "Built for Africa" range with the world's first solar-powered netbook, televisions with power surge protection, and this year will launch an entry-level Galaxy smartphone. The company showed off the products at a show in Cape Town this weekend.

After opening its Africa headquarters in 2010, the company visited 43 countries to see the local environments in which devices are used and found durability, efficiency and reliability are key.

"We found that the products we were selling to the advanced market don't work as much as we'd expect here in Africa and also the people in the different countries and different continents require different attributes," Park told AFP.

"For example, for TV, in the field test we found that the failure rate is almost four times higher than in advanced markets, in Africa because of the power fluctuation."

Research is key to entering the African market, said Roelf Mulder, managing director of South African design firm XYZ Design.

"Big multi-national corporations are looking at Africa, saying how do we need to design for Africa? The first step here is to do research," he said.

"They all want to increase their market share. What is the method for doing that? It's going to be embedded in research."

With more than half of Africa's population without electricity, Philips sees the need for renewable energy solutions and has designed solar-powered home and flood lights.

"When transforming these insights into actual product solutions, we work with partners on the ground who test and feedback. This is essential. You cannot do this from outside Africa," said Kelso.

The push for Africa comes amid a surging middle class estimated by the African Development Bank at 313 million people, just over a third of the continent's population, who hover between the extremes of desperate poverty and wild wealth.

Four years ago, just some 100,000 Africans had a net worth equal to 60 percent of Africa's GDP.

"We believe it's the right time to start to invest in the Africa market given its population," said Samsung's Park.

"Seventy percent of the African people, they are under 30 years old which means they are our future customers."

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Swaziland to ban anti-Mswati tweets
Mbabane (AFP) March 23, 2012 - Swaziland plans to crack down on criticism of King Mswati III by making it illegal to bad-mouth Africa's last absolute monarch on Facebook and Twitter, the justice minister said Friday.

"We will be tough on those who write bad things about the king on Twitter and Facebook. We want to set an example," justice minister Mgwagwa Gamedze told the senate.

The minister said government was finalising a law that will make it illegal to speak badly of the king on social media networks and that it would soon come to the tiny mountain kingdom's parliament, which rubber stamps legislation.

Mswati has faced growing criticism and unprecedented public protests over the last year due to a financial crisis that has pushed the kingdom to the brink of bankruptcy.

Gamedze was responding to Senator Thuli Msane, who on Thursday said people continuously wrote terrible things about the nation and its authorities on social media.

"It's like the moment Swazi people cross the border to neighbouring countries they begin to go on a campaign to disrespect their own country and king," said Msane.

"Surely there is something that must be done with them. There must be a law that can take them to task."

The minister said he too had noted that the reputation of the country and that of the king was being tarnished hence the law.

The announcement came as students and labour unions are planning a series of protests in the coming weeks, beginning with a student protest Monday against the collapse of higher education.



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